I hope that for any code, it is changed only with good reason and only
when the author knows what they are doing...
There is of course good reason to comment here about the subtlety of the
process, and I've left that comment in tact.
llvm-svn: 292275
instead of members.
No state was being provided by the object so this seems strictly
simpler.
I've also tried to improve the name and comments for the functions to
more thoroughly document what they are doing.
llvm-svn: 292274
that we know has exactly one element when all we are going to do is get
that one element out of it.
Instead, pass around that one element.
There are more simplifications to come in this code...
llvm-svn: 292273
If a memory instruction will be vectorized, but it's pointer operand is
non-consecutive-like, the instruction is a gather or scatter operation. Its
pointer operand will be non-uniform. This should fix PR31671.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31671
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28819
llvm-svn: 292254
Add missing fabs(fpext) optimzation that worked with the call,
and also fixes it creating a second fpext when there were multiple
uses.
llvm-svn: 292172
It's not clear what 'First' and 'Second' mean, so use 'Inner' and 'Outer'
to match foldShiftedShift() and add comments with formulas, so it's easier
to see what's going on.
llvm-svn: 292153
Simplify a pshufb shuffle mask based on the elements of the mask that are actually demanded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28745
llvm-svn: 292101
a function's CFG when that CFG is unchanged.
This allows transformation passes to simply claim they preserve the CFG
and analysis passes to check for the CFG being preserved to remove the
fanout of all analyses being listed in all passes.
I've gone through and removed or cleaned up as many of the comments
reminding us to do this as I could.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28627
llvm-svn: 292054
mark it as never invalidated in the new PM.
The old PM already required this to work, and after a discussion with
Hal this seems to really be the only sensible answer. The cache
gracefully degrades as the IR is mutated, and most things which do this
should already be incrementally updating the cache.
This gets rid of a bunch of logic preserving and testing the
invalidation of this analysis.
llvm-svn: 292039
cover domtree and alias analysis. These are the pretty clear analyses
that we would always want to survive this pass.
To make these survive, we also need to preserve the assumption cache.
Added a test that verifies the important bits of this preservation.
llvm-svn: 292037
Allows LLVM to optimize sequences like the following:
%add = add nuw i32 %x, 1
%cmp = icmp ugt i32 %add, %y
Into:
%cmp = icmp uge i32 %x, %y
Previously, only signed comparisons were being handled.
Decrements could also be handled, but 'sub nuw %x, 1' is currently canonicalized to
'add %x, -1' in InstCombineAddSub, losing the nuw flag. Removing that canonicalization
seems like it might have far-reaching ramifications so I kept this simple for now.
Patch by Matti Niemenmaa!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24700
llvm-svn: 291975
Summary:
This is a testcase where phi node cycling happens, and because we do
not order the leaders by domination or anything similar, the leader
keeps changing.
Using std::set for the members is too expensive, and we actually don't
need them sorted all the time, only at leader changes.
We could keep both a set and a vector, and keep them mostly sorted and
resort as necessary, or use a set and a fibheap, but all of this seems
premature.
After running some statistics, we are able to avoid the vast majority
of sorting by keeping a "next leader" field. Most congruence classes only have
leader changes once or twice during GVN.
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28594
llvm-svn: 291968
Other than on COFF with incremental linking, global metadata should
not need any extra alignment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28628
llvm-svn: 291859
Summary:
We can sometimes end up with multiple copies of a local function that
have the same GUID in the index. This happens when there are local
functions with the same name that are in different source files with the
same name (but in different directories), and they were compiled in
their own directory so had the same path at compile time.
In this case make sure we import the copy in the caller's module. While
it isn't a correctness problem (the renamed reference which is based on the
module IR hash will be unique since the module must have had an
externally visible function that was imported), importing the wrong copy
will result in lost performance opportunity since it won't be referenced
and inlined.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28440
llvm-svn: 291841
It was always zero. When we move a store from `initial` to its
own congruency class, we end up with a negative store count, which
is obviously wrong.
Also, while here, change StoreCount to be signed so that the assertions
actually fire.
Ack'ed by Daniel Berlin.
llvm-svn: 291725
When using profiling and ASan together (-fprofile-instr-generate -fcoverage-mapping -fsanitize=address), at least on Darwin, the section of globals that ASan emits (__asan_globals) is misaligned and starts at an odd offset. This really doesn't have anything to do with profiling, but it triggers the issue because profiling emits a string section, which can have arbitrary size. This patch changes the alignment to sizeof(GlobalStruct).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28573
llvm-svn: 291715
This means that we can use a shorter instruction sequence in the case where
the size is a power of two and on the boundary between two representations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28421
llvm-svn: 291706
classes, and updating checking to allow for equivalence through
reachability.
(Sadly, the checking here is not perfect, and can't be made perfect,
so we'll have to disable it after we are satisfied with correctness.
Right now it is just "very unlikely" to happen.)
llvm-svn: 291698
The removed assert seems bogus - it's perfectly legal for the roots of the
vectorized subtrees to be equal even if the original scalar values aren't,
if the original scalars happen to be equivalent.
This fixes PR31599.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28539
llvm-svn: 291692
Summary:
Revert LowerTypeTests: Split the pass in two: a resolution phase and a lowering phase.
This change separates how type identifiers are resolved from how intrinsic
calls are lowered. All information required to lower an intrinsic call
is stored in a new TypeIdLowering data structure. The idea is that this
data structure can either be initialized using the module itself during
regular LTO, or using the module summary in ThinLTO backends.
Original URL: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28341
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28532
llvm-svn: 291684
Here's my second try at making @llvm.assume processing more efficient. My
previous attempt, which leveraged operand bundles, r289755, didn't end up
working: it did make assume processing more efficient but eliminating the
assumption cache made ephemeral value computation too expensive. This is a
more-targeted change. We'll keep the assumption cache, but extend it to keep a
map of affected values (i.e. values about which an assumption might provide
some information) to the corresponding assumption intrinsics. This allows
ValueTracking and LVI to find assumptions relevant to the value being queried
without scanning all assumptions in the function. The fact that ValueTracking
started doing O(number of assumptions in the function) work, for every
known-bits query, has become prohibitively expensive in some cases.
As discussed during the review, this is a pragmatic fix that, longer term, will
likely be replaced by a more-principled solution (perhaps based on an extended
SSA form).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28459
llvm-svn: 291671
the latter to the Transforms library.
While the loop PM uses an analysis to form the IR units, the current
plan is to have the PM itself establish and enforce both loop simplified
form and LCSSA. This would be a layering violation in the analysis
library.
Fundamentally, the idea behind the loop PM is to *transform* loops in
addition to running passes over them, so it really seemed like the most
natural place to sink this was into the transforms library.
We can't just move *everything* because we also have loop analyses that
rely on a subset of the invariants. So this patch splits the the loop
infrastructure into the analysis management that has to be part of the
analysis library, and the transform-aware pass manager.
This also required splitting the loop analyses' printer passes out to
the transforms library, which makes sense to me as running these will
transform the code into LCSSA in theory.
I haven't split the unittest though because testing one component
without the other seems nearly intractable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28452
llvm-svn: 291662
updated instructions:
pmulld, pmullw, pmulhw, mulsd, mulps, mulpd, divss, divps, divsd, divpd, addpd and subpd.
special optimization case which replaces pmulld with pmullw\pmulhw\pshuf seq.
In case if the real operands bitwidth <= 16.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28104
llvm-svn: 291657
arguments much like the CGSCC pass manager.
This is a major redesign following the pattern establish for the CGSCC layer to
support updates to the set of loops during the traversal of the loop nest and
to support invalidation of analyses.
An additional significant burden in the loop PM is that so many passes require
access to a large number of function analyses. Manually ensuring these are
cached, available, and preserved has been a long-standing burden in LLVM even
with the help of the automatic scheduling in the old pass manager. And it made
the new pass manager extremely unweildy. With this design, we can package the
common analyses up while in a function pass and make them immediately available
to all the loop passes. While in some cases this is unnecessary, I think the
simplicity afforded is worth it.
This does not (yet) address loop simplified form or LCSSA form, but those are
the next things on my radar and I have a clear plan for them.
While the patch is very large, most of it is either mechanically updating loop
passes to the new API or the new testing for the loop PM. The code for it is
reasonably compact.
I have not yet updated all of the loop passes to correctly leverage the update
mechanisms demonstrated in the unittests. I'll do that in follow-up patches
along with improved FileCheck tests for those passes that ensure things work in
more realistic scenarios. In many cases, there isn't much we can do with these
until the loop simplified form and LCSSA form are in place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28292
llvm-svn: 291651
These are interesting again because the user may not be aware that this
is a common reason preventing LICM.
A const is removed from an instruction pointer declaration in order to
pass it to ORE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27940
llvm-svn: 291649
This patch reverts r291588: [PGO] Turn off comdat renaming in IR PGO by default,
as we are seeing some hash mismatches in our internal tests.
llvm-svn: 291621
Some of the callers are artificially limiting this transform to integer types;
this should make it easier to incrementally remove that restriction.
llvm-svn: 291620
Summary:
This fixes Transforms/LoopUnroll/runtime-loop3.ll which failed with
EXTENSIVE_DEBUG, because the cloned basic blocks were not added to the
correct sub-loops in LoopUnrollRuntime.cpp.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28482
llvm-svn: 291619
Move the code to update LoopInfo for cloned basic blocks to
addClonedBlockToLoopInfo, as suggested in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D28482.
llvm-svn: 291614
Bail out instead of asserting when we encounter this situation,
which can actually happen.
The reason the test uses the new PM is that the "bad" phi, incidentally, gets
cleaned up by LoopSimplify. But LICM can create this kind of phi and preserve
loop simplify form, so the cleanup has no chance to run.
This fixes PR31190.
We may want to solve this in a less conservative manner, since this phi is
actually uniform within the inner loop (or we may want LICM to output a cleaner
promotion to begin with).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28490
llvm-svn: 291589
Summary:
In IR PGO we append the function hash to comdat functions to avoid the
potential hash mismatch. This turns out not legal in some cases: if the comdat
function is address-taken and used in comparison. Renaming changes the semantic.
This patch turns off comdat renaming by default.
To alleviate the hash mismatch issue, we now rename the profile variable
for comdat functions. Profile allows co-existing multiple versions of profiles
with different hash value. The inlined copy will always has the correct profile
counter. The out-of-line copy might not have the correct count. But we will
not have the bogus mismatch warning.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits, xur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28416
llvm-svn: 291588
In some cases StructurizeCfg updates root node, but dominator info
remains unchanges, it causes crash when expensive checks are enabled.
To cope with this problem a new method was added to DominatorTreeBase
that allows adding new root nodes, it is called in StructurizeCfg to
put dominator tree in sync.
This change fixes PR27488.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28114
llvm-svn: 291530
This patch delays the fix-up step for external induction variable users until
after the dominator tree has been properly updated. This should fix PR30742.
The SCEVExpander in InductionDescriptor::transform can generate code in the
wrong location if the dominator tree is not up-to-date. We should work towards
keeping the dominator tree up-to-date throughout the transformation.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30742
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28168
llvm-svn: 291462
fabs(x * x) is not generally safe to assume x is positive if x is a NaN.
This is also less general than it could be, so this will be replaced
with a transformation on the intrinsic.
llvm-svn: 291359
Also move command line handling out of the pass constructor and into
a separate function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28422
llvm-svn: 291323
Summary: LLVM's non-standard notion of phi nodes means we can't both try to substitute for undef in phi nodes *and* use phi nodes as leaders all the time. This changes NewGVN to use the same semantics as SimplifyPHINode to decide which phi nodes are equivalent.
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28312
llvm-svn: 291308
Summary:
r285871 introduced an assert that was overly aggressive in the case
of a same-named local in different same-named files (in different
directories), where the source name and therefore the GUID ended up
the same because the files were compiled in their own directory without
any leading path. Change the handling in the promotion logic to get
the summary for the version in that module.
This also exposed an issue where we are not always importing the
right copy, which is a performance not correctness issue (because
the renaming is based on the module hash which must be different,
see the bug report for details). I will fix that as a follow-on.
Fixes PR31561.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28411
llvm-svn: 291304
This flag is used to track global registration in Mach-O and it doesn't need to be exported and visible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28250
llvm-svn: 291289
This is fixing a bug where Loop Vectorization is widening a load but
with a lower alignment. Hoisting the load without propagating the alignment
will allow inst-combine to later deduce a higher alignment that what the pointer
actually is.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28408
llvm-svn: 291281
order to avoid jumpy line tables. Calls are left alone because they may be inlined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28390
llvm-svn: 291258
This change separates how type identifiers are resolved from how intrinsic
calls are lowered. All information required to lower an intrinsic call
is stored in a new TypeIdLowering data structure. The idea is that this
data structure can either be initialized using the module itself during
regular LTO, or using the module summary in ThinLTO backends.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28341
llvm-svn: 291205
Summary:
Using the linker-supplied list of "preserved" symbols, we can compute
the list of "dead" symbols, i.e. the one that are not reachable from
a "preserved" symbol transitively on the reference graph.
Right now we are using this information to mark these functions as
non-eligible for import.
The impact is two folds:
- Reduction of compile time: we don't import these functions anywhere
or import the function these symbols are calling.
- The limited number of import/export leads to better internalization.
Patch originally by Mehdi Amini.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23488
llvm-svn: 291177
Promotion is always legal when a store within the loop is guaranteed to execute.
However, this is not a necessary condition - for promotion to be memory model
semantics-preserving, it is enough to have a store that dominates every exit
block. This is because if the store dominates every exit block, the fact the
exit block was executed implies the original store was executed as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28147
llvm-svn: 291171
Summary:
Preheader instruction's operands will always be invariant w.r.t. the loop which its the preheader
for.
Memory aliases are handled in canSinkOrHoistInst.
Reviewers: danielcdh, davidxl
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28270
llvm-svn: 291132
Summary:
This adds a new summary flag NotEligibleToImport that subsumes
several existing flags (NoRename, HasInlineAsmMaybeReferencingInternal
and IsNotViableToInline). It also subsumes the checking of references
on the summary that was being done during the thin link by
eligibleForImport() for each candidate. It is much more efficient to
do that checking once during the per-module summary build and record
it in the summary.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28169
llvm-svn: 291108
This code seems to be target dependent which may not be the same for all targets.
Passed the decision whether the given stride is complex or not to the target by sending stride information via SCEV to getAddressComputationCost instead of 'IsComplex'.
Specifically at X86 targets we dont see any significant address computation cost in case of the strided access in general.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27518
llvm-svn: 291106
Set up basic YAML I/O support for module summaries, plumb the summary into
the pass and add a few command line flags to test YAML I/O support. Bitcode
support to come separately, as will the code in LowerTypeTests that actually
uses the summary. Also add a couple of tests that pass by virtue of the pass
doing nothing with the summary (which happens to be the correct thing to do
for those tests).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28041
llvm-svn: 291069
performing partial redundancy elimination (PRE). Not doing so can cause jumpy line
tables and confusing (though correct) source attributions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27857
llvm-svn: 291037
Summary:
This is a relatively simple scheme: we use the index emitted in the
bitcode to avoid loading all the global metadata. Instead we load
the index with their position in the bitcode so that we can load each
of them individually. Materializing the global metadata block in this
condition only triggers loading the named metadata, and the ones
referenced from there (transitively). When materializing a function,
metadata from the global block are loaded lazily as they are
referenced.
Two main current limitations are:
1) Global values other than functions are not materialized on demand,
so we need to eagerly load METADATA_GLOBAL_DECL_ATTACHMENT records
(and their transitive dependencies).
2) When we load a single metadata, we don't recurse on the operands,
instead we use a placeholder or a temporary metadata. Unfortunately
tepmorary nodes are very expensive. This is why we don't have it
always enabled and only for importing.
These two limitations can be lifted in a subsequent improvement if
needed.
With this change, the total link time of opt with ThinLTO and Debug
Info enabled is going down from 282s to 224s (~20%).
Reviewers: pcc, tejohnson, dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28113
llvm-svn: 291027
This reapplies r289828 (reverted in r289833 as it broke the address sanitizer). The
debugloc is now only set when the instruction is not a call, as this causes the
verifier to assert (the inliner requires an inlinable callsite to have a debug loc
if the caller and callee have debug info).
Original commit message:
Simplify CFG will try to sink the last instruction in a series of basic blocks,
creating a "common" instruction in the successor block (sinkLastInstruction).
When it does this, the debug location of the single instruction should be the
merged debug locations of the commoned instructions.
Original review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27590
llvm-svn: 290973
We can perform the following:
(add (zext (add nuw X, C1)), C2) -> (zext (add nuw X, C1+C2))
This is only possible if C2 is negative and C2 is greater than or equal to negative C1.
llvm-svn: 290927
I wrote this patch before seeing the comment in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D27114
...that suggests we should actually be canonicalizing the other way.
So just in case we decide this is the right way, we might as well
have a cleaner implementation.
llvm-svn: 290912
Summary:
Regardless how the loop body weight is distributed, we should preserve
total loop body weight. i.e. we should have same weight reaching the body of the loop
or its duplicates in peeled and unpeeled case.
Reviewers: mkuper, davidxl, anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28179
llvm-svn: 290833
Apparently my suggestion of using ternary doesn't really work
as clang complains about incompatible types on LHS and RHS. Some
GCC versions happen to accept the code but clang behaviour is
correct here.
llvm-svn: 290822
Summary:
This avoids the very fragile code for null expressions. We could also use a denseset that tracks which things have null expressions instead, but that seems pretty fragile and premature optimization.
This resolves a number of infinite loop cases, test reductions coming.
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28193
llvm-svn: 290816
Summary: Previously, we tried to fix up the equivalences during symbolic evaluation. This does not work. Now, we change the equivalences during congruence finding, where it belongs. We also initialize the equivalence table to give a maximal answer.
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28192
llvm-svn: 290815
CVP doesn't care about the order of blocks visited, but by using a pre-order traversal over the graph we can a) not visit unreachable blocks and b) optimize as we go so that analysis of later blocks produce slightly more precise results.
I noticed this via inspection and don't have a concrete example which points to the issue.
llvm-svn: 290760
This is similar to the allocfn case - if an alloca is not captured, then it's
necessarily thread-local.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28170
llvm-svn: 290738
Summary:
The current loop complete unroll algorithm checks if unrolling complete will reduce the runtime by a certain percentage. If yes, it will apply a fixed boosting factor to the threshold (by discounting cost). The problem for this approach is that the threshold abruptly. This patch makes the boosting factor a function of runtime reduction percentage, capped by a fixed threshold. In this way, the threshold changes continuously.
The patch also simplified the code by reducing one parameter in UP.
The patch only affects code-gen of two speccpu2006 benchmark:
445.gobmk binary size decreases 0.08%, no performance change.
464.h264ref binary size increases 0.24%, no performance change.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26989
llvm-svn: 290737
"Changed" doesn't actually change within the loop, so there's
no reason to keep track of it - we always return false during
analysis and true after the transformation is made.
llvm-svn: 290735
We correctly canonicalized (add (sext x), (sext y)) to (sext (add x, y))
where possible. However, we didn't perform the same canonicalization
for zexts or for muls.
llvm-svn: 290733
This moves the exit block and insertion point computation to be eager,
instead of after seeing the first scalar we can promote.
The cost is relatively small (the computation happens anyway, see discussion
on D28147), and the code is easier to follow, and can bail out earlier
if there's a catchswitch present.
llvm-svn: 290729
We would check whether we have a prehader *or* dedicated exit blocks,
and go into the promotion loop. Then, for each alias set we'd check
if we have a preheader *and* dedicated exit blocks, and bail if not.
Instead, bail immediately if we don't have both.
llvm-svn: 290728
We want to recompute LCSSA only when we actually promoted a value.
This means we only need to look at changes made by promotion when
deciding whether to recompute it or not, not at regular sinking/hoisting.
(This was what the code was documented as doing, just not what it did)
Hopefully NFC.
llvm-svn: 290726
We bypassed the intrinsic and returned the passthru operand, but we should also add the intrinsic to the worklist since its now dead. This can allow DCE to find it sooner and remove it. Similar was done for InsertElement when the inserted element isn't demanded.
llvm-svn: 290704
Summary:
The optimal iteration order for this problem is RPO order. We want to
process as many preds of a backedge as we can before we process the
backedge.
At the same time, as we add predicate handling, we want to be able to
touch instructions that are dominated by a given block by
ranges (because a change in value numbering a predicate possibly
affects all users we dominate that are using that predicate).
If we don't do it this way, we can't do value inference over
backedges (the paper covers this in depth).
The newgvn branch currently overshoots the last part, and guarantees
that it will touch *at least* the right set of instructions, but it
does touch more. This is because the bitvector instruction ranges are
currently generated in RPO order (so we take the max and the min of
the ranges of dominated blocks, which means there are some in the
middle we didn't have to touch that we did).
We can do better by sorting the dominator tree, and then just using
dominator tree order.
As a preliminary, the dominator tree has some RPO guarantees, but not
enough. It guarantees that for a given node, your idom must come
before you in the RPO ordering. It guarantees no relative RPO ordering
for siblings. We add siblings in whatever order they appear in the module.
So that is what we fix.
We sort the children array of the domtree into RPO order, and then use
the dominator tree for ordering, instead of RPO, since the dominator
tree is now a valid RPO ordering.
Note: This would help any other pass that iterates a forward problem
in dominator tree order. Most of them are single pass. It will still
maximize whatever result they compute. We could also build the
dominator tree in this order, but our incremental updates would still
put it out of sort order, and recomputing the sort order is almost as
hard as general incremental updates of the domtree.
Also note that the sorting does not affect any tests, etc. Nothing
depends on domtree order, including the verifier, the equals
functions for domtree nodes, etc.
How much could this matter, you ask?
Here are the current numbers.
This is generated by running NewGVN over all files in LLVM.
Note that once we propagate equalities, the differences go up by an
order of magnitude or two (IE instead of 29, the max ends up in the
thousands, since the worst case we add a factor of N, where N is the
number of branch predicates). So while it doesn't look that stark for
the default ordering, it gets *much much* worse. There are also
programs in the wild where the difference is already pretty stark
(2 iterations vs hundreds).
RPO ordering:
759040 Number of iterations is 1
112908 Number of iterations is 2
Default dominator tree ordering:
755081 Number of iterations is 1
116234 Number of iterations is 2
603 Number of iterations is 3
27 Number of iterations is 4
2 Number of iterations is 5
1 Number of iterations is 7
Dominator tree sorted:
759040 Number of iterations is 1
112908 Number of iterations is 2
<yay!>
Really bad ordering (sort domtree siblings in postorder. not quite the
worst possible, but yeah):
754008 Number of iterations is 1
21 Number of iterations is 10
8 Number of iterations is 11
6 Number of iterations is 12
5 Number of iterations is 13
2 Number of iterations is 14
2 Number of iterations is 15
3 Number of iterations is 16
1 Number of iterations is 17
2 Number of iterations is 18
96642 Number of iterations is 2
1 Number of iterations is 20
2 Number of iterations is 21
1 Number of iterations is 22
1 Number of iterations is 29
17266 Number of iterations is 3
2598 Number of iterations is 4
798 Number of iterations is 5
273 Number of iterations is 6
186 Number of iterations is 7
80 Number of iterations is 8
42 Number of iterations is 9
Reviewers: chandlerc, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28129
llvm-svn: 290699
emplace_back is not faster if it is equivalent to push_back. In this cases emplaced value had the
same type that the one stored in container. It is ugly and it might be even slower (see
Scott Meyers presentation about emplacement).
llvm-svn: 290685
when they are call edges at the leaf but may (transitively) be reached
via ref edges.
It turns out there is a simple rule: insert everything as a ref edge
which is a safe conservative default. Then we let the existing update
logic handle promoting some of those to call edges.
Note that it would be fairly cheap to make these call edges right away
if that is desirable by testing whether there is some existing call path
from the source to the target. It just seemed like slightly more
complexity in this code path that isn't strictly necessary. If anyone
feels strongly about handling this differently I'm happy to change it.
llvm-svn: 290649
This adds a combine that canonicalizes a chain of inserts which broadcasts
a value into a single insert + a splat shufflevector.
This fixes PR31286.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27992
llvm-svn: 290641
skipping indirectly recursive inline chains.
To do this, we implicitly build an inline stack for each callsite and
check prior to inlining that doing so would not form a cycle. This uses
the exact same technique and even shares some code with the legacy PM
inliner.
This solution remains deeply unsatisfying to me because it means we
cannot actually iterate the inliner externally. Doing so would not be
able to easily detect and avoid such cycles. Some day I would very much
like to have a solution that works without this internal state to detect
cycles, but this is not that day.
llvm-svn: 290590
PMULDQ/PMULUDQ vXi64 instructions only use the even numbered v2Xi32 input elements which SimplifyDemandedVectorElts should try and use.
This builds on r290554 which added supported for 128 and 256-bit.
llvm-svn: 290582
An earlier commit added support for unmasked scalar operations. At that time isel wouldn't generate an optimal sequence for masked operations, but that has now been fixed.
llvm-svn: 290566
inside of `InlineFunction`. Prior to this, call instructions are
specifically being rewritten and replaced within the inlined region,
invalidating some of the call sites.
Several of these regions are using the same technique to walk the
inlined region so this seems clearly safe up to this point.
I've also added a short circuit to the scan for call sites based on what
other code is doing.
With this, the most common crash I've found in the new inliner code is
fixed. I've turned it on for another test case that covers this
scenario.
I'll make my way through most of the other inliner test cases
just to get some easy coverage next.
llvm-svn: 290562
removing fully-dead comdats without removing dead entries in comdats
with live members.
This factors the core logic out of the current inliner's internals to
a reusable utility and leverages that in both places. The factored out
code should also be (minorly) more efficient in cases where we have very
few dead functions or dead comdats to consider.
I've added a test case to cover this behavior of the always inliner.
This is the last significant bug in the new PM's always inliner I've
found (so far).
llvm-svn: 290557
PMULDQ/PMULUDQ vXi64 instructions only use the even numbered v2Xi32 input elements which SimplifyDemandedVectorElts should try and use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28119
llvm-svn: 290554
Mostly use a bit more idiomatic C++ where we can,
so we can combine some things later.
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28111
llvm-svn: 290550
Summary:
I only do this for unmasked cases for now because isel is failing to fold the mask. I'll try to fix that soon.
I'll do the same thing for packed add/sub/mul/div in a future patch.
Reviewers: delena, RKSimon, zvi, craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27879
llvm-svn: 290535
Summary:
This patch adds support for converting the masked vpermv intrinsics into shufflevector instructions if the indices are constants.
We also need to wrap a select instruction around the shuffle to take care of the masking part. InstCombine will take care of optimizing the select if the mask is constant so I didn't bother checking for that.
Reviewers: zvi, delena, spatel, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27825
llvm-svn: 290530
whether functions are removed, and fix the new PM's always inliner to
actually pass this test.
Without this, the new PM's always inliner leaves all the functions
kicking around which won't work out very well given the semantics of
always inline.
Doing this really highlights how frustrating the current alwaysinline
semantic contract is though -- why can we put it on *external*
functions, etc?
Also I've added a number of tricky and interesting test cases for
removing functions with the always inliner. There is one remaining case
not handled -- fully removing comdats -- and I've left a FIXME about
this.
llvm-svn: 290457
The pass creates some state which expects to be cleaned up by
a later instance of the same pass. opt-bisect happens to expose
this not ideal design because calling skipLoop() will result in
this state not being cleaned up at times and an assertion firing
in `doFinalization()`. Chandler tells me the new pass manager will
give us options to avoid these design traps, but until it's not ready,
we need a workaround for the current pass infrastructure. Fix provided
by Andy Kaylor, see the review for a complete discussion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25848
llvm-svn: 290427
Use a dummy private function with inline asm calls instead of module
level asm blocks for CFI jumptables.
The main advantage is that now jumptable codegen can be affected by
the function attributes (like target_cpu on ARM). Module level asm
gets the default subtarget based on the target triple, which is often
not good enough.
This change also uses asm constraints/arguments to reference
jumptable targets and aliases directly. We no longer do asm name
mangling in an IR pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28012
llvm-svn: 290384
The code have been developed by Daniel Berlin over the years, and
the new implementation goal is that of addressing shortcomings of
the current GVN infrastructure, i.e. long compile time for large
testcases, lack of phi predication, no load/store value numbering
etc...
The current code just implements the "core" GVN algorithm, although
other pieces (load coercion, phi handling, predicate system) are
already implemented in a branch out of tree. Once the core is stable,
we'll start adding pieces on top of the base framework.
The test currently living in test/Transform/NewGVN are a copy
of the ones in GVN, with proper `XFAIL` (missing features in NewGVN).
A flag will be added in a future commit to enable NewGVN, so that
interested parties can exercise this code easily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26224
llvm-svn: 290346
from the old pass manager in the new one.
I'm not trying to support (initially) the numerous options that are
currently available to customize the pass pipeline. If we end up really
wanting them, we can add them later, but I suspect many are no longer
interesting. The simplicity of omitting them will help a lot as we sort
out what the pipeline should look like in the new PM.
I've also documented to the best of my ability *why* each pass or group
of passes is used so that reading the pipeline is more helpful. In many
cases I think we have some questionable choices of ordering and I've
left FIXME comments in place so we know what to come back and revisit
going forward. But for now, I've left it as similar to the current
pipeline as I could.
Lastly, I've had to comment out several places where passes are not
ported to the new pass manager or where the loop pass infrastructure is
not yet ready. I did at least fix a few bugs in the loop pass
infrastructure uncovered by running the full pipeline, but I didn't want
to go too far in this patch -- I'll come back and re-enable these as the
infrastructure comes online. But I'd like to keep the comments in place
because I don't want to lose track of which passes need to be enabled
and where they go.
One thing that seemed like a significant API improvement was to require
that we don't build pipelines for O0. It seems to have no real benefit.
I've also switched back to returning pass managers by value as at this
API layer it feels much more natural to me for composition. But if
others disagree, I'm happy to go back to an output parameter.
I'm not 100% happy with the testing strategy currently, but it seems at
least OK. I may come back and try to refactor or otherwise improve this
in subsequent patches but I wanted to at least get a good starting point
in place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28042
llvm-svn: 290325
In r267672, where the loop distribution pragma was introduced, I tried
it hard to keep the old behavior for opt: when opt is invoked
with -loop-distribute, it should distribute the loop (it's off by
default when ran via the optimization pipeline).
As MichaelZ has discovered this has the unintended consequence of
breaking a very common developer work-flow to reproduce compilations
using opt: First you print the pass pipeline of clang
with -debug-pass=Arguments and then invoking opt with the returned
arguments.
clang -debug-pass will include -loop-distribute but the pass is invoked
with default=off so nothing happens unless the loop carries the pragma.
While through opt (default=on) we will try to distribute all loops.
This changes opt's default to off as well to match clang. The tests are
modified to explicitly enable the transformation.
llvm-svn: 290235
No existing client is passing a non-null value here. This will come back
in a slightly different form as part of the type identifier summary work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28006
llvm-svn: 290222
We're currently doing nearly the same thing for @llvm.objectsize in
three different places: two of them are missing checks for overflow,
and one of them could subtly break if InstCombine gets much smarter
about removing alloc sites. Seems like a good idea to not do that.
llvm-svn: 290214
Make it clear that TripCount is the upper bound of the iteration on which
control exits LatchBlock.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26675
llvm-svn: 290199
This doesn't implement *every* feature of the existing inliner, but
tries to implement the most important ones for building a functional
optimization pipeline and beginning to sort out bugs, regressions, and
other problems.
Notable, but intentional omissions:
- No alloca merging support. Why? Because it isn't clear we want to do
this at all. Active discussion and investigation is going on to remove
it, so for simplicity I omitted it.
- No support for trying to iterate on "internally" devirtualized calls.
Why? Because it adds what I suspect is inappropriate coupling for
little or no benefit. We will have an outer iteration system that
tracks devirtualization including that from function passes and
iterates already. We should improve that rather than approximate it
here.
- Optimization remarks. Why? Purely to make the patch smaller, no other
reason at all.
The last one I'll probably work on almost immediately. But I wanted to
skip it in the initial patch to try to focus the change as much as
possible as there is already a lot of code moving around and both of
these *could* be skipped without really disrupting the core logic.
A summary of the different things happening here:
1) Adding the usual new PM class and rigging.
2) Fixing minor underlying assumptions in the inline cost analysis or
inline logic that don't generally hold in the new PM world.
3) Adding the core pass logic which is in essence a loop over the calls
in the nodes in the call graph. This is a bit duplicated from the old
inliner, but only a handful of lines could realistically be shared.
(I tried at first, and it really didn't help anything.) All told,
this is only about 100 lines of code, and most of that is the
mechanics of wiring up analyses from the new PM world.
4) Updating the LazyCallGraph (in the new PM) based on the *newly
inlined* calls and references. This is very minimal because we cannot
form cycles.
5) When inlining removes the last use of a function, eagerly nuking the
body of the function so that any "one use remaining" inline cost
heuristics are immediately refined, and queuing these functions to be
completely deleted once inlining is complete and the call graph
updated to reflect that they have become dead.
6) After all the inlining for a particular function, updating the
LazyCallGraph and the CGSCC pass manager to reflect the
function-local simplifications that are done immediately and
internally by the inline utilties. These are the exact same
fundamental set of CG updates done by arbitrary function passes.
7) Adding a bunch of test cases to specifically target CGSCC and other
subtle aspects in the new PM world.
Many thanks to the careful review from Easwaran and Sanjoy and others!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24226
llvm-svn: 290161
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades and a change
to the Bitcode record for DIGlobalVariable, that makes upgrading the
old format unambiguous also for variables without DIExpressions.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 290153
Background/motivation - I was circling back around to:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28296
I made a simple patch for that and noticed some regressions, so added test cases for
those with rL281055, and this is hopefully the minimal fix for just those cases.
But as you can see from the surrounding untouched folds, we are missing commuted patterns
all over the place, and of course there are no regression tests to cover any of those cases.
We could sprinkle "m_c_" dust all over this file and catch most of the missing folds, but
then we still wouldn't have test coverage, and we'd still miss some fraction of commuted
patterns because they require adjustments to the match order.
I'm aware of the concern about the potential compile-time performance impact of adding
matches like this (currently being discussed on llvm-dev), but I don't think there's any
evidence yet to suggest that handling commutative pattern matching more thoroughly is not
a worthwhile goal of InstCombine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24419
llvm-svn: 290067
This reverts commit 289920 (again).
I forgot to implement a Bitcode upgrade for the case where a DIGlobalVariable
has not DIExpression. Unfortunately it is not possible to safely upgrade
these variables without adding a flag to the bitcode record indicating which
version they are.
My plan of record is to roll the planned follow-up patch that adds a
unit: field to DIGlobalVariable into this patch before recomitting.
This way we only need one Bitcode upgrade for both changes (with a
version flag in the bitcode record to safely distinguish the record
formats).
Sorry for the churn!
llvm-svn: 289982
This patch reapplies r289863. The original patch was reverted because it
exposed a bug causing the loop vectorizer to crash in the Python runtime on
PPC. The underlying issue was fixed with r289958.
llvm-svn: 289975
After r288909, instructions feeding predicated instructions may be scalarized
if profitable. Since these instructions will remain scalar, we shouldn't
attempt to type-shrink them. We should only truncate vector types to their
minimal bit widths. This bug was exposed by enabling the vectorization of loops
containing conditional stores by default.
llvm-svn: 289958
stores by default
This uncovers a crasher in the loop vectorizer on PPC when building the
Python runtime. I'll send the testcase to the review thread for the
original commit.
llvm-svn: 289934
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289920
Summary:
Instead of checking whether a global referenced by a function being
imported is defined in the same module, speculatively always add the
referenced globals to the module's export list. After all imports are
computed, for each module prune any not in its defined set from its
export list.
For a huge C++ app with aggressive importing thresholds, even with
D27687 we spent a lot of time invoking modulePath() from
exportGlobalInModule (modulePath() was still the 2nd hottest routine in
profile). The reason is that with comdat/linkonce the summary lists for
each GUID can be long. For the app in question, for example, we were
invoking exportGlobalInModule almost 2 million times, and we traversed
an average of 63 entries in the summary list each time.
This patch reduced the thin link time for the app by about 10% (on top
of D27687) when using aggressive importing thresholds, and about 3.5% on
average with default importing thresholds.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27755
llvm-svn: 289918
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289902
This pass prepares a module containing type metadata for ThinLTO by splitting
it into regular and thin LTO parts if possible, and writing both parts to
a multi-module bitcode file. Modules that do not contain type metadata are
written unmodified as a single module.
All globals with type metadata are added to the regular LTO module, and
the rest are added to the thin LTO module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27324
llvm-svn: 289899
Summary:
We were reinvoking exportGlobalInModule numerous times redundantly.
No need to re-export globals referenced by a global that was already
imported from its module. This resulted in a large speedup in the thin
link for a big application, particularly when importing aggressiveness
was cranked up.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27687
llvm-svn: 289896
Lowering to llvm.cttz() will result in constant folding anyway
if the argument to ffs is a constant. Pointed out by Eli for
fls() in D14590.
llvm-svn: 289888
The code change for D27687 accidentally got committed along with the
main change in r289843. Revert it temporarily, so that I can recommit it
along with its test as intended.
llvm-svn: 289875
Summary:
Thin link efficiency improvement. After adding an importing candidate to
the worklist we might have later added it again with a higher threshold.
Skip it when popped from the worklist if we recorded a higher threshold
than the current worklist entry, it will get processed again at the
higher threshold when that entry is popped.
This required adding the summary's GUID to the worklist, so that it can
be used to query the recorded highest threshold for it when we pop from the
worklist.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27696
llvm-svn: 289867
This patch sets the default value of the "-enable-cond-stores-vec" command line
option to "true".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27814
llvm-svn: 289863
Now that a new API to merge debug locations has been committed at r289661 (see
review D26256 for more details), we can use it to "improve" the code added by
revision r280995.
Instead of nulling the debugloc of a commoned instruction, we use the 'merged'
debug location. At the moment, this is just a no functional change since
function `DILocation::getMergedLocation()` is just a stub and would always
return a null location.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27804
llvm-svn: 289862
Min/max canonicalization (r287585) exposes the fact that we're missing combines for min/max patterns.
This patch won't solve the example that was attached to that thread, so something else still needs fixing.
The line between InstCombine and InstSimplify gets blurry here because sometimes the icmp instruction that
we want to fold to already exists, but sometimes it's the swapped form of what we want.
Corresponding changes for smax/umin/umax to follow.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27531
llvm-svn: 289855
This is split out from D27696, since it turned out to be a bug fix and
not part of the NFC efficiency change.
Keep the same adjusted (possibly decayed) threshold in both the worklist
and the ImportList. Otherwise if we encountered it first along a cold
path, the callee would be added to the worklist with a lower decayed
threshold than when it is later encountered along a hot path. But the
logic uses the threshold recorded in the ImportList entry to check if
we should re-add it, and without this patch the threshold recorded there
is the same along both paths so we don't re-add it. Using the
same possibly decayed threshold in the ImportList ensures we re-add it
later with the higher non-decayed hot path threshold.
llvm-svn: 289843
Simplify CFG will try to sink the last instruction in a series of basic blocks,
creating a "common" instruction in the successor block (sinkLastInstruction).
When it does this, the debug location of the single instruction should be the
merged debug locations of the commoned instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27590
llvm-svn: 289828
A number of new patterns for simplifying and/xor of icmp:
(icmp ne %x, 0) ^ (icmp ne %y, 0) => icmp ne %x, %y if the following is true:
1- (%x = and %a, %mask) and (%y = and %b, %mask)
2- %mask is a power of 2.
(icmp eq %x, 0) & (icmp ne %y, 0) => icmp ult %x, %y if the following is true:
1- (%x = and %a, %mask1) and (%y = and %b, %mask2)
2- Let %t be the smallest power of 2 where %mask1 & %t != 0. Then for any
%s that is a power of 2 and %s & %mask2 != 0, we must have %s <= %t.
For example if %mask1 = 24 and %mask2 = 16, setting %s = 16 and %t = 8
violates condition (2) above. So this optimization cannot be applied.
llvm-svn: 289813
After r289755, the AssumptionCache is no longer needed. Variables affected by
assumptions are now found by using the new operand-bundle-based scheme. This
new scheme is more computationally efficient, and also we need much less
code...
llvm-svn: 289756
There was an efficiency problem with how we processed @llvm.assume in
ValueTracking (and other places). The AssumptionCache tracked all of the
assumptions in a given function. In order to find assumptions relevant to
computing known bits, etc. we searched every assumption in the function. For
ValueTracking, that means that we did O(#assumes * #values) work in InstCombine
and other passes (with a constant factor that can be quite large because we'd
repeat this search at every level of recursion of the analysis).
Several of us discussed this situation at the last developers' meeting, and
this implements the discussed solution: Make the values that an assume might
affect operands of the assume itself. To avoid exposing this detail to
frontends and passes that need not worry about it, I've used the new
operand-bundle feature to add these extra call "operands" in a way that does
not affect the intrinsic's signature. I think this solution is relatively
clean. InstCombine adds these extra operands based on what ValueTracking, LVI,
etc. will need and then those passes need only search the users of the values
under consideration. This should fix the computational-complexity problem.
At this point, no passes depend on the AssumptionCache, and so I'll remove
that as a follow-up change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27259
llvm-svn: 289755
Summary: SampleProfileLoader pass may be invoked twice by LTO. The 2nd pass should not append more summary info as it is already preset by the 1st pass.
Reviewers: eraman, davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27733
llvm-svn: 289725
Summary: We used to create SampleProfileLoader pass in clang. This makes LTO/ThinLTO unable to add this pass in the linker plugin. This patch moves the SampleProfileLoader pass creation from clang to llvm pass manager builder.
Reviewers: tejohnson, davidxl, dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27743
llvm-svn: 289714
If all the operands to a phi node are compares that have a RHS constant,
instcombine will try to pull them through the phi node, combining them into
a single operation. When it does this, the debug location of the new op
should be the merged debug locations of the phi node arguments.
Patch 8 of 8 for D26256. Folding of a compare that has a RHS constant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26256
llvm-svn: 289704
If all the operands to a phi node are a binop with a RHS constant, instcombine
will try to pull them through the phi node, combining them into a single
operation. When it does this, the debug location of the new op should be the
merged debug locations of the phi node arguments.
Patch 7 of 8 for D26256. Folding of a binop with RHS constant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26256
llvm-svn: 289699
Summary:
Move GVNHoist to later in the optimization pipeline, specifically, to
the function simplification part of the pipeline. The new pipeline
location allows GVNHoist to run on a function after its callees have
been inlined but before the function has been considered for inlining
into its callers, exposing more opportunities for hoisting.
Performance results on AArch64 kryo:
Improvements:
Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/fftbench -24.952%
spec2006/bzip2 -4.071%
internal bmark -3.177%
Benchmarks/PAQ8p/paq8p -1.754%
spec2000/perlbmk -1.328%
spec2006/h264ref -1.140%
Regressions:
internal bmark +1.818%
Benchmarks/mafft/pairlocalalign +1.084%
Reviewers: sebpop, dberlin, hiraditya
Subscribers: aemerson, mehdi_amini, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27722
llvm-svn: 289696
If all the operands to a phi node are a cast, instcombine will try to pull
them through the phi node, combining them into a single cast. When it does
this, the debug location of the new cast should be the merged debug locations
of the phi node arguments.
Patch 6 of 8 for D26256. Folding of a cast operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26256
llvm-svn: 289693
If all the operands to a phi node are a load, instcombine will try to pull
them through the phi node, combining them into a single load. When it does
this, the debug location of the new load should be the merged debug locations
of the phi node arguments.
Patch 5 of 8 for D26256. Folding of a load operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26256
llvm-svn: 289688
If all the operands to a phi node are getelementptr, instcombine
will try to pull them through the phi node, combining them into a single
operation. When it does this, the debug location of the new getelementptr
should be the merged debug locations of the phi node arguments.
Patch 4 of 8 for D26256. Folding of a getelementptr operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26256
llvm-svn: 289684
If all the operands to a phi node are of the same operation, instcombine
will try to pull them through the phi node, combining them into a single
operation. When it does this, the debug location of the operation should
be the merged debug locations of the phi node arguments.
Patch 3 of 8 for D26256. Folding of a compare operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26256
llvm-svn: 289681
If all the operands to a phi node are of the same operation, instcombine
will try to pull them through the phi node, combining them into a single
operation. When it does this, the debug location of the operation should
be the merged debug locations of the phi node arguments.
Patch 2 of 8 for D26256. Folding of a binary operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26256
llvm-svn: 289679
Summary: We used to create SampleProfileLoader pass in clang. This makes LTO/ThinLTO unable to add this pass in the linker plugin. This patch moves the SampleProfileLoader pass creation from clang to llvm pass manager builder.
Reviewers: tejohnson, davidxl, dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27743
llvm-svn: 289669
At least the plugin used by the LibreOffice build
(<https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Clang_plugins>) indirectly
uses those members (through inline functions in LLVM/Clang include files in turn
using them), but they are not exported by utils/extract_symbols.py on Windows,
and accessing data across DLL/EXE boundaries on Windows is generally
problematic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26671
llvm-svn: 289647
Now we only pass bit 0 of the DemandedElts to optimize operand 1 as we recurse since the upper bits are unused. Similarly we clear bit 0 for optimizing operand 0.
Also calculate UndefElts correctly.
Simplify InstCombineCalls for these instrinics to just call SimplifyDemandedVectorElts for the call instrution to reuse this support.
llvm-svn: 289629
Now we only pass bit 0 of the DemandedElts to optimize operand 1 as we recurse since the upper bits are unused.
Also calculate UndefElts correctly.
Simplify InstCombineCalls for these instrinics to just call SimplifyDemandedVectorElts for the call instrution to reuse this support.
llvm-svn: 289628
Summary:
This patch will add loop metadata on the pre and post loops generated by IRCE.
Currently, we have metadata for disabling optimizations such as vectorization,
unrolling, loop distribution and LICM versioning (and confirmed that these
optimizations check for the metadata before proceeding with the transformation).
The pre and post loops generated by IRCE need not go through loop opts (since
these are slow paths).
Added two test cases as well.
Reviewers: sanjoy, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26806
llvm-svn: 289588
We currently check if the exact trip count is known and is smaller than the
"tiny loop" bound. We should be checking the maximum bound on the trip count
instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27690
llvm-svn: 289583
Summary:
This is last in of a series of patches to evolve ADCE.cpp to support
removing of unnecessary control flow.
This patch adds the code to update the control and data flow graphs
to remove the dead control flow.
Also update unit tests to test the capability to remove dead,
may-be-infinite loop which is enabled by the switch
-adce-remove-loops.
Previous patches:
D23824 [ADCE] Add handling of PHI nodes when removing control flow
D23559 [ADCE] Add control dependence computation
D23225 [ADCE] Modify data structures to support removing control flow
D23065 [ADCE] Refactor anticipating new functionality (NFC)
D23102 [ADCE] Refactoring for new functionality (NFC)
Reviewers: dberlin, majnemer, nadav, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits, david2050, freik, twoh
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24918
llvm-svn: 289548
Only the lower bits of the input element are used. And only the lower element can be undef since the upper bits are zeroed.
Have InstCombineCalls call SimplifyDemandedVectorElts for these intrinsics to reuse this support.
llvm-svn: 289523
Summary:
Since we don't break BBs for function calls. We might get some insane counts
(wrap of unsigned) in the presence of noreturn calls.
This patch sets these counts to zero instead of the wrapped number.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: xur, eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27602
llvm-svn: 289521
This patch ensures the correct minimum bit width during type-shrinking.
Previously when type-shrinking, we always sign-extended values back to their
original width. However, if we are going to sign-extend, and the sign bit is
unknown, we have to increase the minimum bit width by one bit so the
sign-extend will fill the upper bits correctly. If the sign bit is known to be
zero, we can perform a zero-extend instead. This should fix PR31243.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31243
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27466
llvm-svn: 289470
We could truncate the condition and then try to fold the add into the
original condition value causing wrong case constants to be used.
Move the offset transform ahead of the truncate transform and return
after each transform, so there's no chance of getting confused values.
Fix for:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31260
llvm-svn: 289442
This teaches SimplifyDemandedElts that the FMA can be removed if the lower element isn't used. It also teaches it that if upper elements of the first operand aren't used then we can simplify them.
llvm-svn: 289377
These intrinsics don't read the upper elements of their first and second input. These are slightly different the the SSE version which does use the upper bits of its first element as passthru bits since the result goes to an XMM register. For AVX-512 the result goes to a mask register instead.
llvm-svn: 289371
These intrinsics don't read the upper bits of their second input. And the third input is the passthru for masking and that only uses the lower element as well.
llvm-svn: 289370
The motivating example is:
extern int patatino;
int goo() {
int x = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; ++i) {
x *= patatino;
}
return x;
}
Currently SCCP will not realize that this function returns always zero,
therefore will try to unroll and vectorize the loop at -O3 producing an
awful lot of (useless) code. With this change, it will just produce:
0000000000000000 <g>:
xor %eax,%eax
retq
llvm-svn: 289175
When trying to vectorize trees that start at insertelement instructions
function tryToVectorizeList() uses vectorization factor calculated as
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize. But sometimes it does not work as tree
cost for this fixed vectorization factor is too high.
Patch tries to improve the situation. It tries different vectorization
factors from max(PowerOf2Floor(NumberOfVectorizedValues),
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize) to MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize and tries
to choose the best one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27215
llvm-svn: 289043
Replace @progbits in the section directive with %progbits, because "@" starts a comment on arm/thumb.
Use b.w branch instruction.
Use .thumb_function and .thumb_set for proper arm/thumb interwork. This way jumptable entry addresses on thumb have bit 0 set (correctly). This does not affect CFI check math, because the address of the jumptable start also has that bit set.
This does not work on thumbv5, because it does not support b.w, and the linker would not insert a veneer (trampoline?) to extend the range of b.n. We may need to do full-range plt-style jumptables on thumbv54, which are 12 bytes per entry. Another option is "push lr; bl; pop pc" (4 bytes) but that needs unwinding instructions, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27499
llvm-svn: 289008
The fix committed in r288851 doesn't cover all the cases.
In particular, if we have an instruction with side effects
which has a no non-dbg use not depending on the bits, we still
perform RAUW destroying the dbg.value's first argument.
Prevent metadata from being replaced here to avoid the issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27534
llvm-svn: 288987
This patch attempts to scalarize the operand expressions of predicated
instructions if they were conditionally executed in the original loop. After
scalarization, the expressions will be sunk inside the blocks created for the
predicated instructions. The transformation essentially performs
un-if-conversion on the operands.
The cost model has been updated to determine if scalarization is profitable. It
compares the cost of a vectorized instruction, assuming it will be
if-converted, to the cost of the scalarized instruction, assuming that the
instructions corresponding to each vector lane will be sunk inside a predicated
block, possibly avoiding execution. If it's more profitable to scalarize the
entire expression tree feeding the predicated instruction, the expression will
be scalarized; otherwise, it will be vectorized. We only consider the cost of
the entire expression to accurately estimate the cost of the required
insertelement and extractelement instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26083
llvm-svn: 288909
In the case of a fully redundant load LI dominated by an equivalent load V, GVN
should always preserve the original debug location of V. Otherwise, we risk to
introduce an incorrect stepping.
If V has debug info, then clearly it should not be modified. If V has a null
debugloc, then it is still potentially incorrect to propagate LI's debugloc
because LI may not post-dominate V.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27468
llvm-svn: 288903
When a function F is inlined, InlineFunction extends the debug location of every
instruction inlined from F by adding an InlinedAt.
However, if an instruction has a 'null' debug location, InlineFunction would
propagate the callsite debug location to it. This behavior existed since
revision 210459.
Revision 210459 was originally committed specifically to workaround the lack of
debug information for instructions inlined from intrinsic functions (which are
usually declared with attributes `__always_inline__, __nodebug__`).
The problem with revision 210459 is that it doesn't make any sort of distinction
between instructions inlined from a 'nodebug' function and instructions which
are inlined from a function built with debug info. This issue may lead to
incorrect stepping in the debugger.
This patch works under the assumption that a nodebug function does not have a
DISubprogram. When a function F is inlined into another function G,
InlineFunction checks if F has debug info associated with it.
For nodebug functions, the InlineFunction logic is unchanged (i.e. it would
still propagate the callsite debugloc to the inlined instructions). Otherwise,
InlineFunction no longer propagates the callsite debug location.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27462
llvm-svn: 288895
Requesting metadata for a global is a relatively expensive operation as it
involves a map lookup, but it's one that we need to do relatively frequently in
this pass to collect the list of type metadata nodes associated with a global.
This change improves the performance of type metadata queries by prebuilding
data structures that keep the global together with its list of type metadata,
and changing the pass to use that data structure wherever we were previously
passing global references around.
This change also eliminates some O(N^2) behavior by collecting the list of
globals associated with each type identifier during the first pass over the
list of globals rather than visiting each global to compute that list every
time we add a new type identifier.
Reduces pass runtime on a module containing Chrome's vtables from over 60s
to 0.9s.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27484
llvm-svn: 288859
BDCE has two phases:
1. It asks SimplifyDemandedBits if all the bits of an instruction are dead, and if so,
replaces all its uses with the constant zero.
2. Then, it asks SimplifyDemandedBits again if the instruction is really dead
(no side effects etc..) and if so, eliminates it.
Now, in 1) if all the bits of an instruction are dead, we may end up replacing a dbg use:
%call = tail call i32 (...) @g() #4, !dbg !15
tail call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %call, i64 0, metadata !8, metadata !16), !dbg !17
->
%call = tail call i32 (...) @g() #4, !dbg !15
tail call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 0, i64 0, metadata !8, metadata !16), !dbg !17
but not eliminating the call because it may have arbitrary side effects.
In other words, we lose some debug informations.
This patch fixes the problem making sure that BDCE does nothing with the instruction if
it has side effects and no non-dbg uses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27471
llvm-svn: 288851
There are two cases handled here:
1) a branch on undef
2) a switch with an undef condition.
Both cases are currently handled by ResolvedUndefsIn. If we have
a branch on undef, we force its value to false (which is trivially
foldable). If we have a switch on undef, we force to the first
constant (which is also foldable).
llvm-svn: 288725
so we can stop using DW_OP_bit_piece with the wrong semantics.
The entire back story can be found here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20161114/405934.html
The gist is that in LLVM we've been misinterpreting DW_OP_bit_piece's
offset field to mean the offset into the source variable rather than
the offset into the location at the top the DWARF expression stack. In
order to be able to fix this in a subsequent patch, this patch
introduces a dedicated DW_OP_LLVM_fragment operation with the
semantics that we used to apply to DW_OP_bit_piece, which is what we
actually need while inside of LLVM. This patch is complete with a
bitcode upgrade for expressions using the old format. It does not yet
fix the DWARF backend to use DW_OP_bit_piece correctly.
Implementation note: We discussed several options for implementing
this, including reserving a dedicated field in DIExpression for the
fragment size and offset, but using an custom operator at the end of
the expression works just fine and is more efficient because we then
only pay for it when we need it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27361
rdar://problem/29335809
llvm-svn: 288683
This solves a secondary problem seen in PR6137:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=6137#c6
This is similar to the bitwise logic op fold added with:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL287707
And like that patch, I'm artificially restricting the
transform from vector <-> scalar types until we're sure
that the backend can handle that.
llvm-svn: 288584
For -O0 there might be unreachable BBs, which breaks the assumption that all the
BBs have an auxiliary data structure. In this patch, we add another interface
called findBBInfo() so that a nullptr can be returned for the unreachable BBs
(and the callers can ignore those BBs).
This fixes the bug reported
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31209
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27280
llvm-svn: 288528
This reverts commit r288497, as it broke the AArch64 build of Compiler-RT's
builtins (twice: once in r288412 and once in r288497). We should investigate
this offline.
llvm-svn: 288508
When trying to vectorize trees that start at insertelement instructions
function tryToVectorizeList() uses vectorization factor calculated as
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize. But sometimes it does not work as tree
cost for this fixed vectorization factor is too high.
Patch tries to improve the situation. It tries different vectorization
factors from max(PowerOf2Floor(NumberOfVectorizedValues),
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize) to MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize and tries
to choose the best one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27215
llvm-svn: 288497
Now that PointerType is no longer a SequentialType, all SequentialTypes
have an associated number of elements, so we can move that information to
the base class, allowing for a number of simplifications.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27122
llvm-svn: 288464
As proposed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-October/106640.html
This is for a couple of reasons:
- Values of type PointerType are unlike the other SequentialTypes (arrays
and vectors) in that they do not hold values of the element type. By moving
PointerType we can unify certain aspects of how the other SequentialTypes
are handled.
- PointerType will have no place in the SequentialType hierarchy once
pointee types are removed, so this is a necessary step towards removing
pointee types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26595
llvm-svn: 288462
Instead, expose whether the current type is an array or a struct, if an array
what the upper bound is, and if a struct the struct type itself. This is
in preparation for a later change which will make PointerType derive from
Type rather than SequentialType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26594
llvm-svn: 288458
Summary:
We were doing an optimization in the ThinLTO backends of importing
constant unnamed_addr globals unconditionally as a local copy (regardless
of whether the thin link decided to import them). This should be done in
the thin link instead, so that resulting exported references are marked
and promoted appropriately, but will need a summary enhancement to mark
these variables as constant unnamed_addr.
The function import logic during the thin link was trying to handle
this proactively, by conservatively marking all values referenced in
the initializer lists of exported global variables as also exported.
However, this only handled values referenced directly from the
initializer list of an exported global variable. If the value is itself
a constant unnamed_addr variable, we could end up exporting its
references as well. This caused multiple issues. The first is that the
transitively exported references weren't promoted. Secondly, some could
not be promoted/renamed (e.g. they had a section or other constraint).
recursively, instead of just adding the first level of initializer list
references to the ExportList directly.
Remove this optimization and the associated handling in the function
import backend. SPEC measurements indicate we weren't getting much
from it in any case.
Fixes PR31052.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: krasin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26880
llvm-svn: 288446
The instcombine code which folds loads and stores into their use types can trip up if the use is a bitcast to a type which we can't directly load or store in the IR. In principle, such types shouldn't exist, but in practice they do today. This is a workaround to avoid a bug while we work towards the long term goal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24365
llvm-svn: 288415
This just extracts out the transfer rules for constant ranges into a single shared point. As it happens, neither bit of code actually overlaps in terms of the handled operators, but with this change that could easily be tweaked in the future.
I also want to have this separated out to make experimenting with a eager value info implementation and possibly a ValueTracking-like fixed depth recursion peephole version. There's no reason all four of these can't share a common implementation which reduces the chances of bugs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27294
llvm-svn: 288413
When trying to vectorize trees that start at insertelement instructions
function tryToVectorizeList() uses vectorization factor calculated as
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize. But sometimes it does not work as tree
cost for this fixed vectorization factor is too high.
Patch tries to improve the situation. It tries different vectorization
factors from max(PowerOf2Floor(NumberOfVectorizedValues),
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize) to MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize and tries
to choose the best one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27215
llvm-svn: 288412
Currently when cost of scalar operations is evaluated the vector type is
used for scalar operations. Patch fixes this issue and fixes evaluation
of the vector operations cost.
Several test showed that vector cost model is too optimistic. It
allowed vectorization of 8 or less add/fadd operations, though scalar
code is faster. Actually, only for 16 or more operations vector code
provides better performance.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26277
llvm-svn: 288398
[recommitting after the fix in r288307]
This requires some changes to the opt-diag API. Hal and I have
discussed this at the Dev Meeting and came up with a streaming delimiter
(setExtraArgs) to solve this.
Arguments after this delimiter are only included in the optimization
records and not in the remarks printed in the compiler output. (Note,
how in the test the content of the YAML file changes but the remarks on
the compiler output don't.)
This implements the green GVN message with a bug fix at line
http://lab.llvm.org:8080/artifacts/opt-view_test-suite/build/SingleSource/Benchmarks/Dhrystone/CMakeFiles/dry.dir/html/_org_test-suite_SingleSource_Benchmarks_Dhrystone_dry.c.html#L446
The fix is that now we properly include the constant value in the
message: "load of type i32 eliminated in favor of 7"
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26489
llvm-svn: 288380
This class represents a symbol table built from in-memory IR. It provides
access to GlobalValues and should only be used if such access is required
(e.g. in the LTO implementation). We will eventually change IRObjectFile
to read from a bitcode symbol table rather than using ModuleSymbolTable,
so it would not be able to expose the module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27073
llvm-svn: 288319
If LoopInfo is available during GVN, BasicAA will use it. However
MergeBlockIntoPredecessor does not update LI as it merges blocks.
This didn't use to cause problems because LI was freed before
GVN/BasicAA. Now with OptimizationRemarkEmitter, the lifetime of LI is
extended so LI needs to be kept up-to-date during GVN.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27288
llvm-svn: 288307
Summary:
Fix a case when first register in a search has maximum
RegUses.getUsedByIndices(Reg).count()
Reviewers: qcolombet
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D26877
From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 288278
This implements PGO-driven loop peeling.
The basic idea is that when the average dynamic trip-count of a loop is known,
based on PGO, to be low, we can expect a performance win by peeling off the
first several iterations of that loop.
Unlike unrolling based on a known trip count, or a trip count multiple, this
doesn't save us the conditional check and branch on each iteration. However,
it does allow us to simplify the straight-line code we get (constant-folding,
etc.). This is important given that we know that we will usually only hit this
code, and not the actual loop.
This is currently disabled by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25963
llvm-svn: 288274
Michel Dänzer reported that r288051, "[StructurizeCFG] Use range-based
for loops", introduced a bug into rebuildSSA, wherein we were iterating
over an instruction's use list while modifying it, without taking care
to do this correctly.
llvm-svn: 288200
The flag was introduced because the optimization controlled by the flag initially caused regressions. All the regressions were fixed some time ago and the flag has been false for quite a while.
llvm-svn: 288154
Enable scalar hoisting at -Oz as it is safe to hoist scalars to a place
where they are partially needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27111
llvm-svn: 288141
Currently SLP vectorizer tries to vectorize a binary operation and dies
immediately after unsuccessful the first unsuccessfull attempt. Patch
tries to improve the situation, trying to vectorize all binary
operations of all children nodes in the binop tree.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25517
llvm-svn: 288115
This way, when the linker adds padding between globals, we can skip over
the zero padding bytes and reliably find the start of the next metadata
global.
llvm-svn: 288096
Preserving lifetime markers isn't as important as allowing promotion,
so just drop the lifetime markers if necessary.
This also fixes an assertion failure where other parts of SROA assumed
that lifetime markers never block promotion.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=29139.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24854
llvm-svn: 288074
Summary:
As far as I can tell, doing our own computations in
NearestCommonDominator is a false optimization -- DomTree will build up
what appears to be exactly this data when it decides it's worthwhile.
Moreover, by building the cache ourselves, we cannot take advantage of
the cache that the domtree might have available.
In addition, I am not convinced of the correctness of the original code.
In particular, setting ResultIndex = 1 on the first addBlock instead of
setting it to 0 is quite fishy. Similarly, it's not clear to me that
setting IndexMap[Node] = 0 for every node as we walk up the tree finding
a common parent is correct. But rather than ponder over these
questions, I'd rather just make the code do the obviously-correct thing.
This patch also changes the NearestCommonDominator API a bit, improving
the names and getting rid of the boolean parameter in addBlock -- see
http://jlebar.com/2011/12/16/Boolean_parameters_to_API_functions_considered_harmful..html
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: aemerson, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26998
llvm-svn: 288050
Note that the non-splat lshr+lshr test folded, but that does not
work in general. Something is missing or wrong in computeKnownBits
as the non-splat shl+shl test still shows.
llvm-svn: 288005
There are other spots where we can use this; we're currently dropping
metadata in some places, and there are proposed changes where we will
want to propagate metadata.
IRBuilder's CreateSelect() already has a parameter like this, so this
change makes the regular 'Create' API line up with that.
llvm-svn: 287976
Summary:
The iterative algorithm for Loop Unswitching may render some of the branches unreachable in the unswitched loops.
Given the exponential nature of the algorithm, this is quite an overhead.
This patch fixes this problem by selectively unswitching only those branches within a loop that are reachable from the loop header.
Reviewers: Michael Zolothukin, Anna Thomas, Weiming Zhao.
Subscribers: llvm-commits.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D26299
llvm-svn: 287925
analyses to have a common type which is enforced rather than using
a char object and a `void *` type when used as an identifier.
This has a number of advantages. First, it at least helps some of the
confusion raised in Justin Lebar's code review of why `void *` was being
used everywhere by having a stronger type that connects to documentation
about this.
However, perhaps more importantly, it addresses a serious issue where
the alignment of these pointer-like identifiers was unknown. This made
it hard to use them in pointer-like data structures. We were already
dodging this in dangerous ways to create the "all analyses" entry. In
a subsequent patch I attempted to use these with TinyPtrVector and
things fell apart in a very bad way.
And it isn't just a compile time or type system issue. Worse than that,
the actual alignment of these pointer-like opaque identifiers wasn't
guaranteed to be a useful alignment as they were just characters.
This change introduces a type to use as the "key" object whose address
forms the opaque identifier. This both forces the objects to have proper
alignment, and provides type checking that we get it right everywhere.
It also makes the types somewhat less mysterious than `void *`.
We could go one step further and introduce a truly opaque pointer-like
type to return from the `ID()` static function rather than returning
`AnalysisKey *`, but that didn't seem to be a clear win so this is just
the initial change to get to a reliably typed and aligned object serving
is a key for all the analyses.
Thanks to Richard Smith and Justin Lebar for helping pick plausible
names and avoid making this refactoring many times. =] And thanks to
Sean for the super fast review!
While here, I've tried to move away from the "PassID" nomenclature
entirely as it wasn't really helping and is overloaded with old pass
manager constructs. Now we have IDs for analyses, and key objects whose
address can be used as IDs. Where possible and clear I've shortened this
to just "ID". In a few places I kept "AnalysisID" to make it clear what
was being identified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27031
llvm-svn: 287783
Summary:
The "getVectorizablePrefix" method would give up if it found an aliasing load for a store chain.
In practice, the aliasing load can be treated as a memory barrier and all stores that precede it
are a valid vectorizable prefix.
Issue found by volkan in D26962. Testcase is a pruned version of the one in the original patch.
Reviewers: jlebar, arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, wdng, nhaehnle, anna, volkan, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27008
llvm-svn: 287781
Summary:
No need to copy the RPOT vector before using it. Switch from std::map
to SmallDenseMap. Get rid of an unused variable (TempVisited). Get rid
of a typedef, RNVector, which is now used only once.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26997
llvm-svn: 287721
Summary:
"addRequired" and "addPreserved" look very similar when squished up next
to each other -- without the newline this code looked to me like it was
addRequired'ing DominatorTreeWrapperPass twice.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26996
llvm-svn: 287720
Summary: Lets us get rid of one member variable too.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26992
llvm-svn: 287716
We visit and/or, we try to derive a lattice value for the
instruction even if one of the operands is overdefined.
If the non-overdefined value is still 'unknown' just return and wait
for ResolvedUndefsIn to "plug in" the correct value. This simplifies
the logic a bit. While I'm here add tests for missing cases.
llvm-svn: 287709
In PR27925:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27925
...we proposed adding this fold to eliminate a bitcast. In D20774, there was
some concern about changing the type of a bitwise op as well as creating
bitcasts that might not be free for a target. However, if we're strictly
eliminating an instruction (by limiting this to one-use ops), then we should
be able to do this in InstCombine.
But we're cautiously restricting the transform for now to vector types to
avoid possible backend problems. A transform to make sure the logic op is
legal for the target should be added to reverse this transform and improve
codegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26641
llvm-svn: 287707
Allow using an instruction other than a mul or phi as the base for
root-finding. For example, the included testcase includes a loop
which requires using a getelementptr as the base for root-finding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26529
llvm-svn: 287588
This is a first step towards canonicalization and improved folding/codegen
for integer min/max as discussed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-November/106868.html
Here, we're just matching the simplest min/max patterns and adjusting the
icmp predicate while swapping the select operands.
I've included FIXME tests in test/Transforms/InstCombine/select_meta.ll
so it's easier to see how this might be extended (corresponds to the TODO
comment in the code). That's also why I'm using matchSelectPattern()
rather than a simpler check; once the backend is patched, we can just
remove some of the restrictions to allow the obfuscated min/max patterns
in the FIXME tests to be matched.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26525
llvm-svn: 287585
Summary:
This is similar to what was done for Darwin in rL264645 /
http://reviews.llvm.org/D16737, but it uses COFF COMDATs to achive the
same result instead of relying on new custom linker features.
As on MachO, this creates one metadata global per instrumented global.
The metadata global is placed in the custom .ASAN$GL section, which the
ASan runtime will iterate over during initialization. There are no other
references to the metadata, so normal linker dead stripping would
discard it. However, the metadata is put in a COMDAT group with the
instrumented global, so that it will be discarded if and only if the
instrumented global is discarded.
I didn't update the ASan ABI version check since this doesn't affect
non-Windows platforms, and the WinASan ABI isn't really stable yet.
Implementing this for ELF will require extending LLVM IR and MC a bit so
that we can use non-COMDAT section groups.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, mehdi_amini, kubabrecka
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26770
llvm-svn: 287576
This patch fixes the non-determinism caused due to iterating SmallPtrSet's
which was uncovered due to the experimental "reverse iteration order " patch:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26718
The following unit tests failed because of the undefined order of iteration.
LLVM :: Transforms/Util/MemorySSA/cyclicphi.ll
LLVM :: Transforms/Util/MemorySSA/many-dom-backedge.ll
LLVM :: Transforms/Util/MemorySSA/many-doms.ll
LLVM :: Transforms/Util/MemorySSA/phi-translation.ll
Reviewers: dberlin, mgrang
Subscribers: dberlin, llvm-commits, david2050
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26704
llvm-svn: 287563
On some architectures (s390x, ppc64, sparc64, mips), C-level int is passed
as i32 signext instead of plain i32. Likewise, unsigned int may be passed
as i32, i32 signext, or i32 zeroext depending on the platform. Mark
__llvm_profile_instrument_target properly (its last parameter is unsigned
int).
This (together with the clang change) makes compiler-rt profile testsuite pass
on s390x.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21736
llvm-svn: 287534
insertUniqueBackedgeBlock in lib/Transforms/Utils/LoopSimplify.cpp now
propagates existing llvm.loop metadata to newly the added backedge.
llvm::TryToSimplifyUncondBranchFromEmptyBlock in lib/Transforms/Utils/Local.cpp
now propagates existing llvm.loop metadata to the branch instructions in the
predecessor blocks of the empty block that is removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26495
llvm-svn: 287341
This is a straightforward extension of the existing support for 32/64-bit element types. Just needed to add the additional instrinsics to the switches.
llvm-svn: 287316
This patch updates a bunch of places where add_dependencies was being explicitly called to add dependencies on intrinsics_gen to instead use the DEPENDS named parameter. This cleanup is needed for a patch I'm working on to add a dependency debugging mode to the build system.
llvm-svn: 287206
Summary:
For flat loop, even if it is hot, it is not a good idea to unroll in runtime, thus we set a lower partial unroll threshold.
For hot loop, we set a higher unroll threshold and allows expensive tripcount computation to allow more aggressive unrolling.
Reviewers: davidxl, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: sanjoy, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26527
llvm-svn: 287186
This pass splits globals into elements using inrange annotations on
getelementptr indices.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22295
llvm-svn: 287178
Summary: These intrinsics have been unused for clang for a while. This patch removes them. We auto upgrade them to extractelements, a scalar operation and then an insertelement. This matches the sequence used by clangs intrinsic file.
Reviewers: zvi, delena, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26660
llvm-svn: 287083
Summary:
We don't do BypassSlowDivision when the denominator is a constant, but
we do do it when the numerator is a constant.
This patch makes two related changes to BypassSlowDivision when the
numerator is a constant:
* If the numerator is too large to fit into the bypass width, don't
bypass slow division (because we'll never run the smaller-width
code).
* If we bypass slow division where the numerator is a constant, don't
OR together the numerator and denominator when determining whether
both operands fit within the bypass width. We need to check only the
denominator.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26699
llvm-svn: 287062
This patch adds support for instrumenting masked loads and stores under
ASan, if they have a constant mask.
isInterestingMemoryAccess now supports returning a mask to be applied to
the loads, and instrumentMop will use it to generate additional checks.
Added tests for v4i32 v8i32, and v4p0i32 (~v4i64) for both loads and
stores (as well as a test to verify we don't add checks to non-constant
masks).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26230
llvm-svn: 287047
In RateRegister of existing LSR, if a formula contains a Reg which is a SCEVAddRecExpr,
and this SCEVAddRecExpr's loop is an outerloop, the formula will be marked as Loser
and dropped.
Suppose we have an IR that %for.body is outerloop and %for.body2 is innerloop. LSR only
handle inner loop now so only %for.body2 will be handled.
Using the logic above, formula like
reg(%array) + reg({1,+, %size}<%for.body>) + 1*reg({0,+,1}<%for.body2>) will be dropped
no matter what because reg({1,+, %size}<%for.body>) is a SCEVAddRecExpr type reg related
with outerloop. Only formula like
reg(%array) + 1*reg({{1,+, %size}<%for.body>,+,1}<nuw><nsw><%for.body2>) will be kept
because the SCEVAddRecExpr related with outerloop is folded into the initial value of the
SCEVAddRecExpr related with current loop.
But in some cases, we do need to share the basic induction variable
reg{0 ,+, 1}<%for.body2> among LSR Uses to reduce the final total number of induction
variables used by LSR, so we don't want to drop the formula like
reg(%array) + reg({1,+, %size}<%for.body>) + 1*reg({0,+,1}<%for.body2>) unconditionally.
From the existing comment, it tries to avoid considering multiple level loops at the same time.
However, existing LSR only handles innermost loop, so for any SCEVAddRecExpr with a loop other
than current loop, it is an invariant and will be simple to handle, and the formula doesn't have
to be dropped.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26429
llvm-svn: 286999
When both WidenIV::getWideRecurrence and WidenIV::getExtendedOperandRecurrence
return non-null but different WideAddRec, if getWideRecurrence is called
before getExtendedOperandRecurrence, we won't bother to call
getExtendedOperandRecurrence again. But As we know it is possible that after
SCEV folding, we cannot prove the legality using the SCEVAddRecExpr returned
by getWideRecurrence. Meanwhile if getExtendedOperandRecurrence returns non-null
WideAddRec, we know for sure that it is legal to do widening for current instruction.
So it is better to put getExtendedOperandRecurrence before getWideRecurrence, which
will increase the chance of successful widening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26059
llvm-svn: 286987
The register usage algorithm incorrectly treats instructions whose value is
not used within the loop (e.g. those that do not produce a value).
The algorithm first calculates the usages within the loop. It iterates over
the instructions in order, and records at which instruction index each use
ends (in fact, they're actually recorded against the next index, as this is
when we want to delete them from the open intervals).
The algorithm then iterates over the instructions again, adding each
instruction in turn to a list of open intervals. Instructions are then
removed from the list of open intervals when they occur in the list of uses
ended at the current index.
The problem is, instructions which are not used in the loop are skipped.
However, although they aren't used, the last use of a value may have been
recorded against that instruction index. In this case, the use is not deleted
from the open intervals, which may then bump up the estimated register usage.
This patch fixes the issue by simply moving the "is used" check after the loop
which erases the uses at the current index.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26554
llvm-svn: 286969
This adds support for TSan C++ exception handling, where we need to add extra calls to __tsan_func_exit when a function is exitted via exception mechanisms. Otherwise the shadow stack gets corrupted (leaked). This patch moves and enhances the existing implementation of EscapeEnumerator that finds all possible function exit points, and adds extra EH cleanup blocks where needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26177
llvm-svn: 286893
Summary:
We have always speculatively promoted all renamable local values
(except const non-address taken variables) for both the exporting
and importing module. We would then internalize them back based on
the ThinLink results if they weren't actually exported. This is
inefficient, and results in unnecessary renames. It also meant we
had to check the non-renamability of a value in the summary, which
was already checked during function importing analysis in the ThinLink.
Made renameModuleForThinLTO (which does the promotion/renaming) instead
use the index when exporting, to avoid unnecessary renames/promotions.
For importing modules, we can simply promoted all values as any local
we import by definition is exported and needs promotion.
This required changes to the method used by the FunctionImport pass
(only invoked from 'opt' for testing) and when invoked from llvm-link,
since neither does a ThinLink. We simply conservatively mark all locals
in the index as promoted, which preserves the current aggressive
promotion behavior.
I also needed to change an llvm-lto based test where we had previously
been aggressively promoting values that weren't importable (aliasees),
but now will not promote.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26467
llvm-svn: 286871
Summary:
The change in r285513 to prevent exporting of locals used in
inline asm added all locals in the llvm.used set to the reference
set of functions containing inline asm. Since these locals were marked
NoRename, this automatically prevented importing of the function.
Unfortunately, this caused an explosion in the summary reference lists
in some cases. In my particular example, it happened for a large protocol
buffer generated C++ file, where many of the generated functions
contained an inline asm call. It was exacerbated when doing a ThinLTO
PGO instrumentation build, where the PGO instrumentation included
thousands of private __profd_* values that were added to llvm.used.
We really only need to include a single llvm.used local (NoRename) value
in the reference list of a function containing inline asm to block it
being imported. However, it seems cleaner to add a flag to the summary
that explicitly describes this situation, which is what this patch does.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26402
llvm-svn: 286840
Summary:
Unfolding selects was previously done with the help of a vector
of pointers that was then sorted to be able to remove duplicates.
As this sorting depends on the memory addresses, it was
non-deterministic. A SetVector is used now so that duplicates are
removed without the need of sorting first.
Reviewers: mgrang, efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26450
llvm-svn: 286807
All existing callers were manually extracting information out of an existing
GEP instruction and passing it to getGEPExpr(). Simplify the interface by
changing it to take a GEPOperator instead.
llvm-svn: 286751
This implements a function annotation that disables TSan checking for the
function at run time. The benefit over attribute((no_sanitize("thread")))
is that the accesses within the callees will also be suppressed.
The motivation for this attribute is a guarantee given by the objective C
language that the calls to the reference count decrement and object
deallocation will be synchronized. To model this properly, we would need
to intercept all ref count decrement calls (which are very common in ObjC
due to use of ARC) and also every single message send. Instead, we propose
to just ignore all accesses made from within dealloc at run time. The main
downside is that this still does not introduce any synchronization, which
means we might still report false positives if the code that relies on this
synchronization is not executed from within dealloc. However, we have not seen
this in practice so far and think these cases will be very rare.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25858
llvm-svn: 286663
This is PR28376.
Unfortunately given the current structure of optimization diagnostics we
lack the capability to tell whether the user has
passed -Rpass-analysis=loop-vectorize since this is local to the
front-end (BackendConsumer::OptimizationRemarkHandler).
So rather than printing this even if the user has already
passed -Rpass-analysis, this patch just punts and stops recommending
this option. I don't think that getting this right is worth the
complexity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26563
llvm-svn: 286662
This is a follow-up on the recent refactoring of the FunctionMerge pass.
It should fix a fail of the new FunctionComparator unittest whe compiling with MSVC.
llvm-svn: 286648
When a function pointer is replaced with a jumptable pointer, special
case is needed to preserve the semantics of extern_weak functions.
Since a jumptable entry can not be extern_weak, we emulate that
behaviour by replacing all references to F (the extern_weak function)
with the following expression: F != nullptr ? JumpTablePtr : nullptr.
Extra special care is needed for global initializers, since most (or
probably all) backends can not lower an initializer that includes
this kind of constant expression. Initializers like that are replaced
with a global constructor (i.e. a runtime initializer).
llvm-svn: 286636
This is pure refactoring. NFC.
This change moves the FunctionComparator (together with the GlobalNumberState
utility) in to a separate file so that it can be used by other passes.
For example, the SwiftMergeFunctions pass in the Swift compiler:
https://github.com/apple/swift/blob/master/lib/LLVMPasses/LLVMMergeFunctions.cpp
Details of the change:
*) The big part is just moving code out of MergeFunctions.cpp into FunctionComparator.h/cpp
*) Make FunctionComparator member functions protected (instead of private)
so that a derived comparator class can use them.
Following refactoring helps to share code between the base FunctionComparator
class and a derived class:
*) Add a beginCompare() function
*) Move some basic function property comparisons into a separate function compareSignature()
*) Do the GEP comparison inside cmpOperations() which now has a new
needToCmpOperands reference parameter
https://reviews.llvm.org/D25385
llvm-svn: 286632
The current implementation is emitting a global constant that happens
to evaluate to the same bytes + relocation as a jump instruction on
X86. This does not work for PIE executables and shared libraries
though, because we end up with a wrong relocation type. And it has no
chance of working on ARM/AArch64 which use different relocation types
for jump instructions (R_ARM_JUMP24) that is never generated for
data.
This change replaces the constant with module-level inline assembly
followed by a hidden declaration of the jump table. Works fine for
ARM/AArch64, but has some drawbacks.
* Extra symbols are added to the static symbol table, which inflate
the size of the unstripped binary a little. Stripped binaries are not
affected. This happens because jump table declarations must be
external (because their body is in the inline asm).
* Original functions that were anonymous are now named
<original name>.cfi, and it affects symbolization sometimes. This is
necessary because the only user of these functions is the (inline
asm) jump table, so they had to be added to @llvm.used, which does
not allow unnamed functions.
llvm-svn: 286611
Removing the limitation in visitInsertElementInst() causes several regressions
because we're not prepared to fold sequences of shuffles or inserts and extracts
separated by shuffles. Fixing that appears to be a difficult mission because we
are purposely trying to avoid creating shuffles with arbitrary shuffle masks
because some targets may choke on those.
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30923
llvm-svn: 286423
No testcase included because I can't figure out how to reduce it.
(It's easy to write a testcase where rotation clones an assume,
but that doesn't actually seem to trigger the crash in opt on
its own; maybe an issue with the laziness?)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26434
llvm-svn: 286410
Summary:
Unrolled Loop Size calculations moved to a function.
Constant representing number of optimized instructions
when "back edge" becomes "fall through" replaced with
variable.
Some comments added.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21719
From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 286389
Scalar Evolution asserts when not all the operands of an Add Recurrence
Expression are loop invariants. Loop Strength Reduction should only
create affine Add Recurrences, so that both the start and the step of
the expression are loop invariants.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26185
llvm-svn: 286347
Summary: For functions with profile data, we are confident that loop sink will be optimal in sinking code.
Reviewers: davidxl, hfinkel
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26155
llvm-svn: 286325
As the test change shows, we can increase the critical path by adding
a 'not' instruction, so make sure that we're actually removing an
instruction if we do this transform.
This transform could also cause us to miss folds of min/max pairs.
llvm-svn: 286315
This addresses PR30746, <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30746>. The ASan pass iterates over entry-block instructions and checks each alloca whether it's in NonInstrumentedStaticAllocaVec, which is apparently slow. This patch gathers the instructions to move during visitAllocaInst.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26380
llvm-svn: 286296
For example, it invalidates the domtree, causing assertions
in later passes which need dominator infos. Make it preserve
GlobalsAA, as suggested by Eli.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26381
llvm-svn: 286271
From experiments, discriminator is rarely greater than 127. Here we enforce it to be no greater than 127 so that it will always fit in 1 byte.
llvm-svn: 286245
Summary:
These are good candidates for jump threading. This enables later opts
(such as InstCombine) to combine instructions from the selects with
instructions out of the selects. SimplifyCFG will fold the select
again if unfolding wasn't worth it.
Patch by James Molloy and Pablo Barrio.
Reviewers: rengolin, haicheng, sebpop
Subscribers: jojo, jmolloy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26391
llvm-svn: 286236
Summary:
In some specific scenarios with well understood operand bundle types
(like `"deopt"`) it may be possible to go ahead and convert recursion to
iteration, but TailRecursionElimination does not have that logic today
so avoid doing the right thing for now.
I need some input on whether `"funclet"` operand bundles should also
block tail recursion elimination. If not, I'll allow TRE across calls
with `"funclet"` operand bundles and add a test case.
Reviewers: rnk, majnemer, nlewycky, ahatanak
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26270
llvm-svn: 286147
Although rare, atomic accesses to floating-point types seem to be valid, i.e. `%a = load atomic float ...`. The TSan instrumentation pass however tries to emit inttoptr, which is incorrect, we should use a bitcast here. Anyway, IRBuilder already has a convenient helper function for this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26266
llvm-svn: 286135
Argument evaluation order is one of the edge cases where Clang differs
from GCC, yielding different IR depending on which compiler LLVM was
built with. Make the order deterministic and tune the test to actually
verify the order instead of trying to hide it.
llvm-svn: 286126
This was reverted at r285866 because there was a crash handling a scalar
select of vectors. I added a check for that pattern and a test case based
on the example provided in the post-commit thread for r285732.
llvm-svn: 286113
Summary:
SmallSetVector uses DenseSet, but that means we need to reserve some
values for the empty and tombstone keys.
It seems to me we should have a general way to let us store full-range
ints inside of DenseSets, and furthermore that we probably shouldn't
silently let you add ints into DenseSets without explicitly promising
that they're in range. But that's a battle for another day; for now,
just fix this code, since we currently do something Very Bad when
compiling ffmpeg.
Fixes PR30914.
Reviewers: jeremyhu
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26323
llvm-svn: 286038
instruction.
This avoids dereferencing null in the debug logging if the instruction
was not in fact a return instruction. This potential bug was found by
PVS-Studio.
This actually fixes the last of the "dereferenced a pointer before
checking it for null" reports in the recent PVS-Studio run. However,
there are quite a few reports of this nature that I did not do anything
to fix because they are pretty glaring false positives. They usually
took the form of quite clear correlated checks or a check made in
a separate function. I've even added asserts anywhere this correlation
wasn't pretty obvious and fundamental to the code.
llvm-svn: 285988
This condition is trivially always true prior to the change. The comment
at the call site makes it clear that we expect *all* of these to be '=',
'S', or 'I' so fix the code.
We have a bug I will update to track the fact that Clang doesn't warn on
this: http://llvm.org/PR13101
llvm-svn: 285930
Summary:
The recent change I made to consult the summary when deciding whether to
rename (to handle inline asm) in r285513 broke the distributed build
case. In a distributed backend we will only have a portion of the
combined index, specifically for imported modules we only have the
summaries for any imported definitions. When renaming on import we were
asserting because no summary entry was found for a local reference being
linked in (def wasn't imported).
We only need to consult the summary for a renaming decision for the
exporting module. For imports, we would have prevented importing any
references to NoRename values already.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26250
llvm-svn: 285871
This reverts commit r285732.
This change introduced a new assertion failure in the following
testcase at -O2:
typedef short __v8hi __attribute__((__vector_size__(16)));
__v8hi foo(__v8hi &V1, __v8hi &V2, unsigned mask) {
__v8hi Result = V1;
if (mask & 0x80)
Result[0] = V2[0];
return Result;
}
llvm-svn: 285866
Summary:
It was detected that the reassociate pass could enter an inifite
loop when analysing dead code. Simply skipping to analyse basic
blocks that are dead avoids such problems (and as a side effect
we avoid spending time on optimising dead code).
The solution is using the same Reverse Post Order ordering of the
basic blocks when doing the optimisations, as when building the
precalculated rank map. A nice side-effect of this solution is
that we now know that we only try to do optimisations for blocks
with ranked instructions.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30818
Reviewers: llvm-commits, davide, eli.friedman, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: dberlin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26154
llvm-svn: 285793
This patch introduces the combine:
(C1 shift (A add C2)) -> ((C1 shift C2) shift A)
iff A and C2 are both positive
If both A and C2 are know to be positive then we can safely split into 2 shifts, permitting the folding of the Inner shift.
Fix for the spec benchmark case mentioned by @nadav on PR15141 (assuming we can prove that the inputs as positive).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26000
llvm-svn: 285696
On Darwin, simple C null-terminated constant strings normally end up in the __TEXT,__cstring section of the resulting Mach-O binary. When instrumented with ASan, these strings are transformed in a way that they cannot be in __cstring (the linker unifies the content of this section and strips extra NUL bytes, which would break instrumentation), and are put into a generic __const section. This breaks some of the tools that we have: Some tools need to scan all C null-terminated strings in Mach-O binaries, and scanning all the contents of __const has a large performance penalty. This patch instead introduces a special section, __asan_cstring which will now hold the instrumented null-terminated strings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25026
llvm-svn: 285619
possible pointer-wrap-around concerns, in some cases.
Before this patch, collectConstStridedAccesses (part of interleaved-accesses
analysis) called getPtrStride with [Assume=false, ShouldCheckWrap=true] when
examining all candidate pointers. This is too conservative. Instead, this
patch makes collectConstStridedAccesses use an optimistic approach, calling
getPtrStride with [Assume=true, ShouldCheckWrap=false], and then, once the
candidate interleave groups have been formed, revisits the pointer-wrapping
analysis but only where it matters: namely, in groups that have gaps, and where
the gaps are not at the very end of the group (in which case the loop is
peeled). This second time getPtrStride is called with [Assume=false,
ShouldCheckWrap=true], but this could further be improved to using Assume=true,
once we also add the logic to track that we are not going to meet the scev
runtime checks threshold.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25276
llvm-svn: 285517
Summary:
Instead of using the workaround of suppressing the entire index for
modules that call inline asm that may reference locals, use the
NoRename flag on the summary for any locals in the llvm.used set, and
add a reference edge from any functions containing inline asm.
This avoids issues from having no summaries despite the module defining
global values, which was preventing more aggressive index-based
optimization. It will be followed by a subsequent patch to make a
similar fix for local references in module level asm (to fix PR30610).
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26121
llvm-svn: 285513
Summary:
Replace the check of whether a GV has a section with the flag check
in the summary. This is in preparation for using the NoPromote flag
to convey other situations when we can't promote (e.g. locals used in
inline asm).
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26063
llvm-svn: 285507
Summary:
This "pass" eagerly creates div and rem instructions even when only one
is needed -- it relies on a later pass (machine DCE?) to clean them up.
This is problematic not just from a cleanliness perspective (this pass
is running during CodeGenPrepare, so should leave the IR in a better
state), but it also creates a problem for instruction selection. If we
always have a div+rem, isel will always select a divrem instruction (if
possible), even when a single div or rem would do.
Specifically, in NVPTX, we want to compute rem from the output of div,
if available. But if a div is not available, we want to leave the rem
alone. This transformation is overeager if div is always available.
Because this code runs as part of CodeGenPrepare, it's nontrivial to
write a test for this change. But this will effectively be tested by
a later patch which adds the aforementioned change to NVPTX isel.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26088
llvm-svn: 285460
Summary:
In BypassSlowDivision's short-dividend path, we would create e.g.
udiv exact i32 %a, %b
"exact" here means that we are asserting that %a is a multiple of %b.
But we have no reason to believe this must be true -- this is just a
bug, as far as I can tell.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26097
llvm-svn: 285459
Now LPPassManager will run LCSSA verification only for the top-level loop
which was processed on the current iteration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25873
llvm-svn: 285394
Fixes PR 30784. Discussed with Justin, who pointed out that
in the new PassManager infrastructure we can have more fine-grained
control on which analyses we want to preserve, but this is the
best we can do with the current infrastructure.
llvm-svn: 285380
Summary:
This is in preparation for a change to utilize this flag for symbols
referenced/defined in either inline or module level assembly.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26048
llvm-svn: 285376
Summary: LICM may hoist instructions to preheader speculatively. Before code generation, we need to sink down the hoisted instructions inside to loop if it's beneficial. This pass is a reverse of LICM: looking at instructions in preheader and sinks the instruction to basic blocks inside the loop body if basic block frequency is smaller than the preheader frequency.
Reviewers: hfinkel, davidxl, chandlerc
Subscribers: anna, modocache, mgorny, beanz, reames, dberlin, chandlerc, mcrosier, junbuml, sanjoy, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22778
llvm-svn: 285308
After successfull horizontal reduction vectorization attempt for PHI node
vectorizer tries to update root binary op by combining vectorized tree
and the ReductionPHI node. But during vectorization this ReductionPHI
can be vectorized itself and replaced by the `undef` value, while the
instruction itself is marked for deletion. This 'marked for deletion'
PHI node then can be used in new binary operation, causing "Use still
stuck around after Def is destroyed" crash upon PHI node deletion.
Also the test is fixed to make it perform actual testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25671
llvm-svn: 285286
Summary: This patch introduces updateDiscriminator to DILocation so that it can be directly called by AddDiscriminator. It also makes it easier to update the discriminator later.
Reviewers: dnovillo, dblaikie, aprantl, echristo
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25959
llvm-svn: 285207
When the loop exit condition is canonicalized as a != compaison, reuse the
debug location of the original (non canonical) comparison.
Before this patch, the debug location of the new icmp was obtained from the
loop latch terminator. This patch fixes the issue by correctly setting the
IRBuilder's "current debug location" to the location of the original compare.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25953
llvm-svn: 285185
Summary:
Select instruction annotation in IR PGO uses the edge count to infer the
branch count. It's currently placed in setInstrumentedCounts() where
no all the BB counts have been computed. This leads to wrong branch weights.
Move the annotation after all BB counts are populated.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25961
llvm-svn: 285128
The original patch of the A->B->A BitCast optimization was reverted by r274094 because it may cause infinite loop inside compiler https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27996.
The problem is with following code
xB = load (type B);
xA = load (type A);
+yA = (A)xB; B -> A
+zAn = PHI[yA, xA]; PHI
+zBn = (B)zAn; // A -> B
store zAn;
store zBn;
optimizeBitCastFromPhi generates
+zBn = (B)zAn; // A -> B
and expects it will be combined with the following store instruction to another
store zAn
Unfortunately before combineStoreToValueType is called on the store instruction, optimizeBitCastFromPhi is called on the new BitCast again, and this pattern repeats indefinitely.
optimizeBitCastFromPhi only generates BitCast for load/store instructions, only the BitCast before store can cause the reexecution of optimizeBitCastFromPhi, and BitCast before store can easily be handled by InstCombineLoadStoreAlloca.cpp. So the solution to the problem is if all users of a CI are store instructions, we should not do optimizeBitCastFromPhi on it. Then optimizeBitCastFromPhi will not be called on the new BitCast instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23896
llvm-svn: 285116
When we predicate an instruction (div, rem, store) we place the instruction in
its own basic block within the vectorized loop. If a predicated instruction has
scalar operands, it's possible to recursively sink these scalar expressions
into the predicated block so that they might avoid execution. This patch sinks
as much scalar computation as possible into predicated blocks. We previously
were able to sink such operands only if they were extractelement instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25632
llvm-svn: 285097
This adds a new function to DebugInfo.cpp that takes an llvm::Module
as input and removes all debug info metadata that is not directly
needed for line tables, thus effectively stripping all type and
variable information from the module.
The primary motivation for this feature was the bitcode work flow
(cf. http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-June/100643.html
for more background). This is not wired up yet, but will be in
subsequent patches. For testing, the new functionality is exposed to
opt with a -strip-nonlinetable-debuginfo option.
The secondary use-case (and one that works right now!) is as a
reduction pass in bugpoint. I added two new bugpoint options
(-disable-strip-debuginfo and -disable-strip-debug-types) to control
the new features. By default it will first attempt to remove all debug
information, then only the type info, and then proceed to hack at any
remaining MDNodes.
Thanks to Adrian Prantl for stewarding this patch!
llvm-svn: 285094
When indvars widened an induction variable, the debug location for the loop
increment computation was incorrectly set equal to the debug loc of the loop
latch terminator.
This patch fixes the issue by propagating the correct location from the
original loop increment instruction to the new widened increment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25872
llvm-svn: 285083
Now that MemorySSA keeps track of whether MemoryUses are optimized, use
getClobberingMemoryAccess() to check MemoryUse memory dependencies since
it should no longer be so expensive.
This is a follow-up change to https://reviews.llvm.org/D25881
llvm-svn: 285080
This fixes a bug in the handling of lexical scopes, when more than one
scope is defined on the same line or functions are inlined into call
sites that are on the same line as the function definition. This
situation can easily happen in macro expansions.
The problem is solved by introducing a SmallDenseMap<DIScope *,
DILexicalBlockFile *, 1> that keeps track of all the different lexical
scopes that share a line/file location.
Fixes PR30681.
llvm-svn: 284998
Summary:
When using MemorySSA, re-optimize MemoryPhis when removing a store since
this may create MemoryPhis with all identical arguments.
Also, when using MemorySSA to check if two MemoryUses are reading from
the same version of the heap, use the defining access instead of calling
getClobberingAccess, since the latter can currently result in many more
AA calls. Once the MemorySSA use optimization tracking changes are
done, we can remove this limitation, which should result in more loads
being CSE'd.
Reviewers: dberlin
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25881
llvm-svn: 284984
Summary:
These are good candidates for jump threading. This enables later opts
(such as InstCombine) to combine instructions from the selects with
instructions out of the selects. SimplifyCFG will fold the select
again if unfolding wasn't worth it.
Patch by James Molloy and Pablo Barrio.
Reviewers: reames, bkramer, mcrosier, gberry, haicheng, jmolloy, sebpop
Subscribers: jojo, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25477
llvm-svn: 284971
Summary:
Utility pass to remove gc.relocates created by rewrite statepoints for GC.
With respect to safepoint verification, the IR generated would be incorrect, and cannot run
as such.
This would be a single transformation on the final optimized IR.
The benefit of the pass is for easy analysis when the IRs are 'polluted' by too
many gc.relocates.
Added tests.
test run: All RS4GC tests with -verify option. Local downstream tests on large
IR files. This also works when the pointer being gc.relocated is another
gc.relocate.
Reviewers: sanjoy, reames
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25096
llvm-svn: 284855
When we have a loop with a known upper bound on the number of iterations, and
furthermore know that either the number of iterations will be either exactly
that upper bound or zero, then we can fully unroll up to that upper bound
keeping only the first loop test to check for the zero iteration case.
Most of the work here is in plumbing this 'max-or-zero' information from the
part of scalar evolution where it's detected through to loop unrolling. I've
also gone for the safe default of 'false' everywhere but howManyLessThans which
could probably be improved.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25682
llvm-svn: 284818
There's no agreement about this patch. I personally find the
PRE machinery of the current GVN hard enough to reason about
that I'm not sure I'll try to land this again, instead of working
on the rewrite).
llvm-svn: 284796
Summary:
This allows us to mark when uses have been optimized.
This lets us avoid rewalking (IE when people call getClobberingAccess on everything), and also
enables us to later relax the requirement of use optimization during updates with less cost.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25172
llvm-svn: 284771
All of these existed because MSVC 2013 was unable to synthesize default
move ctors. We recently dropped support for it so all that error-prone
boilerplate can go.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 284721
Some instructions from the original loop, when vectorized, can become trivially
dead. This happens because of the way we structure the new loop. For example,
we create new induction variables and induction variable "steps" in the new
loop. Thus, when we go to vectorize the original induction variable update, it
may no longer be needed due to the instructions we've already created. This
patch prevents us from creating these redundant instructions. This reduces code
size before simplification and allows greater flexibility in code generation
since we have fewer unnecessary instruction uses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25631
llvm-svn: 284631
This change is motivated by the case when IndVarSimplify doesn't widen a comparison of IV increment because it can't prove IV increment being non-negative. We end up with a redundant trunc of the widened increment on this example.
for.body:
%i = phi i32 [ %start, %for.body.lr.ph ], [ %i.inc, %for.inc ]
%within_limits = icmp ult i32 %i, 64
br i1 %within_limits, label %continue, label %for.end
continue:
%i.i64 = zext i32 %i to i64
%arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds i32, i32* %base, i64 %i.i64
%val = load i32, i32* %arrayidx, align 4
br label %for.inc
for.inc:
%i.inc = add nsw nuw i32 %i, 1
%cmp = icmp slt i32 %i.inc, %limit
br i1 %cmp, label %for.body, label %for.end
There is a range check inside of the loop which guarantees the IV to be non-negative. NSW on the increment guarantees that the increment is also non-negative. Teach IndVarSimplify to use the range check to prove non-negativity of loop increments.
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25738
llvm-svn: 284629
Summary:
This pass shrink-wraps a condition to some library calls where the call
result is not used. For example:
sqrt(val);
is transformed to
if (val < 0)
sqrt(val);
Even if the result of library call is not being used, the compiler cannot
safely delete the call because the function can set errno on error
conditions.
Note in many functions, the error condition solely depends on the incoming
parameter. In this optimization, we can generate the condition can lead to
the errno to shrink-wrap the call. Since the chances of hitting the error
condition is low, the runtime call is effectively eliminated.
These partially dead calls are usually results of C++ abstraction penalty
exposed by inlining. This optimization hits 108 times in 19 C/C++ programs
in SPEC2006.
Reviewers: hfinkel, mehdi_amini, davidxl
Subscribers: modocache, mgorny, mehdi_amini, xur, llvm-commits, beanz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24414
llvm-svn: 284542
Summary: Debug info should *not* affect code generation. This patch properly handles debug info to make sure the generated code are the same with or without debug info.
Reviewers: davidxl, mzolotukhin, jmolloy
Subscribers: aprantl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25286
llvm-svn: 284415
Not all ConstantExprs can be represented by a global variable, for example most
pointer arithmetic other than addition of a constant, so we can't convert these
values from switch statements to lookup tables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25550
llvm-svn: 284379
In theory this could be generalized to move anything where
we prove the operands are available, but that would require
rewriting PRE. As NewGVN will hopefully come soon, and we're
trying to rewrite PRE in terms of NewGVN+MemorySSA, it's probably
not worth spending too much time on it. Fix provided by
Daniel Berlin!
llvm-svn: 284311
BasicBlock::size is O(insts), making this loop O(blocks*insts), which
can be really slow on generated code. getPrevNode already checks if
we're at the beginning of the block and returns nullptr if so, just use
that instead. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 284303
- Removed unused class members.
- Made class internal data private.
- Made class scoped data function scoped where it's possible.
- Replace naked new/delete with unique_ptr.
- Made resources guaranteed to be freed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25464
llvm-svn: 284290
Prefer add/zext because they are better supported in terms of value-tracking.
Note that the backend should be prepared for this IR canonicalization
(including vector types) after:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL284015
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25135
llvm-svn: 284241
This patch modifies the cost calculation of predicated instructions (div and
rem) to avoid the accumulation of rounding errors due to multiple truncating
integer divisions. The calculation for predicated stores will be addressed in a
follow-on patch since we currently don't scale the cost of predicated stores by
block probability.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25333
llvm-svn: 284123
This is with an extra change to avoid calling MemoryLocation::get() on a call instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25542
llvm-svn: 284098
This CL didn't actually address the test case in PR30499, and clang
still crashes.
Also revert dependent change "Memory-SSA cleanup of clobbers interface, NFC"
Reverts r283965 and r283967.
llvm-svn: 284093
Reappy r284044 after revert in r284051. Krzysztof fixed the error in r284049.
The original summary:
This patch tries to fully unroll loops having break statement like this
for (int i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
if (a[i] == value) {
found = true;
break;
}
}
GCC can fully unroll such loops, but currently LLVM cannot because LLVM only
supports loops having exact constant trip counts.
The upper bound of the trip count can be obtained from calling
ScalarEvolution::getMaxBackedgeTakenCount(). Part of the patch is the
refactoring work in SCEV to prevent duplicating code.
The feature of using the upper bound is enabled under the same circumstance
when runtime unrolling is enabled since both are used to unroll loops without
knowing the exact constant trip count.
llvm-svn: 284053
This patch tries to fully unroll loops having break statement like this
for (int i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
if (a[i] == value) {
found = true;
break;
}
}
GCC can fully unroll such loops, but currently LLVM cannot because LLVM only
supports loops having exact constant trip counts.
The upper bound of the trip count can be obtained from calling
ScalarEvolution::getMaxBackedgeTakenCount(). Part of the patch is the
refactoring work in SCEV to prevent duplicating code.
The feature of using the upper bound is enabled under the same circumstance
when runtime unrolling is enabled since both are used to unroll loops without
knowing the exact constant trip count.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24790
llvm-svn: 284044
Summary:
Constant bundle operands may need to retain their constant-ness for
correctness. I'll admit that this is slightly odd, but it looks like
SimplifyCFG already does this for things like @llvm.frameaddress and
@llvm.stackmap, so I suppose adding one more case is not a big deal.
It is possible to add a mechanism to denote bundle operands that need to
remain constants, but that's probably too complicated for the time
being.
Reviewers: jmolloy
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25502
llvm-svn: 284028
An arithmetic shift can be safely changed to a logical shift if the first
operand is known positive. This allows ComputeKnownBits (and similar analysis)
to determine the sign bit of the shifted value in some cases. In turn, this
allows InstCombine to canonicalize a signed comparison (a > 0) into an equality
check (a != 0).
PR30577
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25119
llvm-svn: 284013
As discussed by Andrea on PR30486, we have an unsafe cast to an Instruction type in the select combine which doesn't take into account that it could be a ConstantExpr instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25466
llvm-svn: 284000
This implements the cleanup that Danny asked to commit separately from the
previous fix to GVN-hoist in https://reviews.llvm.org/D25476#inline-219818
Tested with ninja check on x86_64-linux.
llvm-svn: 283967
This is a refreshed version of a patch that was reverted: it fixes
the problems reported in both PR30216 and PR30499, and
contains all the test-cases from both bugs.
To hoist stores past loads, we used to search for potential
conflicting loads on the hoisting path by following a MemorySSA
def-def link from the store to be hoisted to the previous
defining memory access, and from there we followed the def-use
chains to all the uses that occur on the hoisting path. The
problem is that the def-def link may point to a store that does
not alias with the store to be hoisted, and so the loads that are
walked may not alias with the store to be hoisted, and even as in
the testcase of PR30216, the loads that may alias with the store
to be hoisted are not visited.
The current patch visits all loads on the path from the store to
be hoisted to the hoisting position and uses the alias analysis
to ask whether the store may alias the load. I was not able to
use the MemorySSA functionality to ask for whether load and
store are clobbered: I'm not sure which function to call, so I
used a call to AA->isNoAlias().
Store past store is still working as before using a MemorySSA
query: I added an extra test to pr30216.ll to make sure store
past store does not regress.
Tested on x86_64-linux with check and a test-suite run.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25476
llvm-svn: 283965
For each block check that it doesn't have any uses outside of it's innermost loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25364
llvm-svn: 283877
When combining an integer load with !range metadata that does not include 0 to a pointer load, make sure emit !nonnull metadata on the newly-created pointer load. This prevents the !nonnull metadata from being dropped during a ptrtoint/inttoptr pair.
This fixes PR30597.
Patch by Ariel Ben-Yehuda!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25215
llvm-svn: 283836
The core of the change is supposed to be NFC, however it also fixes
what I believe was an undefined behavior when calling:
va_start(ValueArgs, Desc);
with Desc being a StringRef.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25342
llvm-svn: 283671
Summary:
If heap allocation of a coroutine is elided, we need to make sure that we will update an address stored in the coroutine frame from f.destroy to f.cleanup.
Before this change, CoroSplit synthesized these stores after coro.begin:
```
store void (%f.Frame*)* @f.resume, void (%f.Frame*)** %resume.addr
store void (%f.Frame*)* @f.destroy, void (%f.Frame*)** %destroy.addr
```
In those cases where we did heap elision, but were not able to devirtualize all indirect calls, destroy call will attempt to "free" the coroutine frame stored on the stack. Oops.
Now we use select to put an appropriate coroutine subfunction in the destroy slot. As bellow:
```
store void (%f.Frame*)* @f.resume, void (%f.Frame*)** %resume.addr
%0 = select i1 %need.alloc, void (%f.Frame*)* @f.destroy, void (%f.Frame*)* @f.cleanup
store void (%f.Frame*)* %0, void (%f.Frame*)** %destroy.addr
```
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25377
llvm-svn: 283625
If we're going to canonicalize IR towards select of constants, try harder to create those.
Also, don't lose the metadata.
This is actually 4 related transforms in one patch:
// select X, (sext X), C --> select X, -1, C
// select X, (zext X), C --> select X, 1, C
// select X, C, (sext X) --> select X, C, 0
// select X, C, (zext X) --> select X, C, 0
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25126
llvm-svn: 283575
Summary: -fsample-profile needs discriminator, which will not be added if built with -g0. This patch makes sure the discriminator is added for sample-profile at -g0. A followup patch will be send out to update clang tests.
Reviewers: davidxl, dblaikie, echristo, dnovillo
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, probinson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25132
llvm-svn: 283565
Previously, we marked the branch conditions of latch blocks uniform after
vectorization if they were instructions contained in the loop. However, if a
condition instruction has users other than the branch, it may not remain
uniform. This patch ensures the conditions we mark uniform are only used by the
branch. This should fix PR30627.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30627
llvm-svn: 283563
unrolling.
The next code is not vectorized by the SLPVectorizer:
```
int test(unsigned int *p) {
int sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < 8; i++)
sum += p[i];
return sum;
}
```
During optimization this loop is fully unrolled and SLPVectorizer is
unable to vectorize it. Patch tries to fix this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24796
llvm-svn: 283535
With the ROPI and RWPI relocation models we can't always have pointers
to global data or functions in constant data, so don't try to convert switches
into lookup tables if any value in the lookup table would require a relocation.
We can still safely emit lookup tables of other values, such as simple
constants.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24462
llvm-svn: 283530
GetCaseResults assumed that a terminator with one successor was an
unconditional branch. This is not necessarily the case, it could be a
cleanupret.
Strengthen the check by querying whether or not the terminator is
exceptional.
llvm-svn: 283517
Add a weak alias to the renamed Comdat function in IR level instrumentation,
using it's original name. This ensures the same behavior w/ and w/o IR
instrumentation, even for non standard conforming code.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D25339
llvm-svn: 283490
This adds a new function to DebugInfo.cpp that takes an llvm::Module
as input and removes all debug info metadata that is not directly
needed for line tables, thus effectively stripping all type and
variable information from the module.
The primary motivation for this feature was the bitcode work flow
(cf. http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-June/100643.html
for more background). This is not wired up yet, but will be in
subsequent patches. For testing, the new functionality is exposed to
opt with a -strip-nonlinetable-debuginfo option.
The secondary use-case (and one that works right now!) is as a
reduction pass in bugpoint. I added two new bugpoint options
(-disable-strip-debuginfo and -disable-strip-debug-types) to control
the new features. By default it will first attempt to remove all debug
information, then only the type info, and then proceed to hack at any
remaining MDNodes.
llvm-svn: 283473
Summary: This makes a change to the state used to maintain visited information for depth first iterator. We know assume a method "completed(...)" which is called after all children of a node have been visited. In all existing cases, this method does nothing so this patch has no functional changes. It will however allow a client to distinguish back from cross edges in a DFS tree.
Reviewers: nadav, mehdi_amini, dberlin
Subscribers: MatzeB, mzolotukhin, twoh, freik, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25191
llvm-svn: 283391
The vectorizer already holds a pointer to one cost model artifact in a member
variable (i.e., MinBWs). As we add more, it will be easier to communicate these
artifacts to the vectorizer if we simply pass a pointer to the cost model
instead.
llvm-svn: 283373
The vectorizer already holds a pointer to the legality analysis in a member
variable, so it makes sense that we would pass it in the constructor.
llvm-svn: 283368
This patch refactors the cost estimation of scalarized loads and stores to
reuse getScalarizationOverhead for the cost of the extractelement and
insertelement instructions we might create. The existing code accounted for
this cost, but it was functionally equivalent to the helper function.
llvm-svn: 283364
The cost model has to estimate the probability of executing predicated blocks.
However, we currently always assume predicated blocks have a 50% chance of
executing (this value is hardcoded in several places throughout the code).
Since we always use the same value, this patch adds a helper function for
getting this uniform probability. The function simplifies some comments and
makes our assumptions more clear. In the future, we may want to extend this
with actual block probability information if it's available.
llvm-svn: 283354
This patch adds a single helper function for checking if an instruction will be
scalarized with predication. Such instructions include conditional stores and
instructions that may divide by zero. Existing checks have been updated to use
the new function.
llvm-svn: 283350
Summary: LoopSink pass uses some common function in LICM. This patch refactor the LICM code to make it usable by LoopSink pass (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22778).
Reviewers: davidxl, danielcdh, hfinkel, chandlerc
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24168
llvm-svn: 283134
Splitting the edge is nontrivial because of the landing pad, and we would
currently assert trying to do it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24680
llvm-svn: 283129
Summary: Added 6 new target hooks for the vectorizer in order to filter types, handle size constraints and decide how to split chains.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, mzolotukhin, wdng, llvm-commits, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24727
llvm-svn: 283099
The binder is in a specific section that "reverse" the edges in a
regular dead-stripping: the binder is live as long as a global it
references is live.
This is a big hammer that prevents LLVM from dead-stripping these,
while still allowing linker dead-stripping (with special knowledge
of the section).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24673
llvm-svn: 282988
Summary:
In the case below, %Result.i19 is defined between coro.save and coro.suspend and used after coro.suspend. We need to correctly place such a value into the coroutine frame.
```
%save = call token @llvm.coro.save(i8* null)
%Result.i19 = getelementptr inbounds %"struct.lean_future<int>::Awaiter", %"struct.lean_future<int>::Awaiter"* %ref.tmp7, i64 0, i32 0
%suspend = call i8 @llvm.coro.suspend(token %save, i1 false)
switch i8 %suspend, label %exit [
i8 0, label %await.ready
i8 1, label %exit
]
await.ready:
%val = load i32, i32* %Result.i19
```
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24418
llvm-svn: 282902
Summary:
Without the fix, if there was a function inlined into the coroutine with debug information, CloneFunctionInto(NewF, &F, VMap, /*ModuleLevelChanges=*/true, Returns); would duplicate all of the debug information including the DICompileUnit.
We know use VMap to indicate that debug metadata for a File, Unit and FunctionType should not be duplicated when we creating clones that will become f.resume, f.destroy and f.cleanup.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24417
llvm-svn: 282899
Summary: Not all coro.subfn.addr intrinsics can be eliminated in CoroElide through devirtualization. Those that remain need to be lowered in CoroCleanup.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24412
llvm-svn: 282897
Summary: Debug info should *not* affect optimization decisions. This patch updates loop unroller cost model to make it not affected by debug info.
Reviewers: davidxl, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: haicheng, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25098
llvm-svn: 282894
Summary:
This patch is adding the support for a shadow memory with
dynamically allocated address range.
The compiler-rt needs to export a symbol containing the shadow
memory range.
This is required to support ASAN on windows 64-bits.
Reviewers: kcc, rnk, vitalybuka
Subscribers: zaks.anna, kubabrecka, dberris, llvm-commits, chrisha
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23354
llvm-svn: 282881
When building the steps for scalar induction variables, we previously attempted
to determine if all the scalar users of the induction variable were uniform. If
they were, we would only emit the step corresponding to vector lane zero. This
optimization was too aggressive. We generally don't know the entire set of
induction variable users that will be scalar. We have
isScalarAfterVectorization, but this is only a conservative estimate of the
instructions that will be scalarized. Thus, an induction variable may have
scalar users that aren't already known to be scalar. To avoid emitting unused
steps, we can only check that the induction variable is uniform. This should
fix PR30542.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30542
llvm-svn: 282863
Summary:
We don't want to decay hot callsites to import chains of hot
callsites. The same mechanism is used in LIPO.
Reviewers: tejohnson, eraman, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24976
llvm-svn: 282833
(Recommit after making sure IsVerbose gets properly initialized in
DiagnosticInfoOptimizationBase. See previous commit that takes care of
this.)
OptimizationRemarkAnalysis directly takes the role of the report that is
generated by LAA.
Then we need the magic to be able to turn an LAA remark into an LV
remark. This is done via a new OptimizationRemark ctor.
llvm-svn: 282813
Also, make foldSelectExtConst() a member of InstCombiner, remove
unnecessary parameters from its interface, and group visitSelectInst
helpers together in the header file.
llvm-svn: 282796
OptimizationRemarkAnalysis directly takes the role of the report that is
generated by LAA.
Then we need the magic to be able to turn an LAA remark into an LV
remark. This is done via a new OptimizationRemark ctor.
llvm-svn: 282758
Summary:
Not tunned up heuristic, but with this small heuristic there is about
+0.10% improvement on SPEC 2006
Reviewers: tejohnson, mehdi_amini, eraman
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24940
llvm-svn: 282733
The last one remaining after which emitAnalysis can be removed is when
we convert the LAA's report to a vectorization report. This requires
converting LAA to the new interface first.
llvm-svn: 282726
Summary:
The patch fixes regression caused by two earlier patches D18777 and D18867.
Reviewers: reames, sanjoy
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24280
From: Li Huang
llvm-svn: 282650
This commit enables more unrolling for SystemZ by implementing the
SystemZTargetTransformInfo::getUnrollingPreferences() method.
It has been found that it is better to only unroll moderately, so the
DefaultUnrollRuntimeCount has been moved into UnrollingPreferences in order
to set this to a lower value for SystemZ (4).
Reviewers: Evgeny Stupachenko, Ulrich Weigand.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24451
llvm-svn: 282570
There is really no reason for these to be separate.
The vectorizer started this pretty bad tradition that the text of the
missed remarks is pretty meaningless, i.e. vectorization failed. There,
you have to query analysis to get the full picture.
I think we should just explain the reason for missing the optimization
in the missed remark when possible. Analysis remarks should provide
information that the pass gathers regardless whether the optimization is
passing or not.
llvm-svn: 282542
(Re-committed after moving the template specialization under the yaml
namespace. GCC was complaining about this.)
This allows various presentation of this data using an external tool.
This was first recommended here[1].
As an example, consider this module:
1 int foo();
2 int bar();
3
4 int baz() {
5 return foo() + bar();
6 }
The inliner generates these missed-optimization remarks today (the
hotness information is pulled from PGO):
remark: /tmp/s.c:5:10: foo will not be inlined into baz (hotness: 30)
remark: /tmp/s.c:5:18: bar will not be inlined into baz (hotness: 30)
Now with -pass-remarks-output=<yaml-file>, we generate this YAML file:
--- !Missed
Pass: inline
Name: NotInlined
DebugLoc: { File: /tmp/s.c, Line: 5, Column: 10 }
Function: baz
Hotness: 30
Args:
- Callee: foo
- String: will not be inlined into
- Caller: baz
...
--- !Missed
Pass: inline
Name: NotInlined
DebugLoc: { File: /tmp/s.c, Line: 5, Column: 18 }
Function: baz
Hotness: 30
Args:
- Callee: bar
- String: will not be inlined into
- Caller: baz
...
This is a summary of the high-level decisions:
* There is a new streaming interface to emit optimization remarks.
E.g. for the inliner remark above:
ORE.emit(DiagnosticInfoOptimizationRemarkMissed(
DEBUG_TYPE, "NotInlined", &I)
<< NV("Callee", Callee) << " will not be inlined into "
<< NV("Caller", CS.getCaller()) << setIsVerbose());
NV stands for named value and allows the YAML client to process a remark
using its name (NotInlined) and the named arguments (Callee and Caller)
without parsing the text of the message.
Subsequent patches will update ORE users to use the new streaming API.
* I am using YAML I/O for writing the YAML file. YAML I/O requires you
to specify reading and writing at once but reading is highly non-trivial
for some of the more complex LLVM types. Since it's not clear that we
(ever) want to use LLVM to parse this YAML file, the code supports and
asserts that we're writing only.
On the other hand, I did experiment that the class hierarchy starting at
DiagnosticInfoOptimizationBase can be mapped back from YAML generated
here (see D24479).
* The YAML stream is stored in the LLVM context.
* In the example, we can probably further specify the IR value used,
i.e. print "Function" rather than "Value".
* As before hotness is computed in the analysis pass instead of
DiganosticInfo. This avoids the layering problem since BFI is in
Analysis while DiagnosticInfo is in IR.
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D19678#419445
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24587
llvm-svn: 282539
LLVM developers might be surprised to learn that there are blocks
without valid insertion points (catchswitch), so it seems worth calling
that out explicitly. Also add a FIXME about what we should really be
doing if we ever need to make optimized Windows EH code debuggable.
While I'm here, make auto usage more consistent with LLVM standards and
avoid an unecessary call to insertBefore.
llvm-svn: 282521
This allows various presentation of this data using an external tool.
This was first recommended here[1].
As an example, consider this module:
1 int foo();
2 int bar();
3
4 int baz() {
5 return foo() + bar();
6 }
The inliner generates these missed-optimization remarks today (the
hotness information is pulled from PGO):
remark: /tmp/s.c:5:10: foo will not be inlined into baz (hotness: 30)
remark: /tmp/s.c:5:18: bar will not be inlined into baz (hotness: 30)
Now with -pass-remarks-output=<yaml-file>, we generate this YAML file:
--- !Missed
Pass: inline
Name: NotInlined
DebugLoc: { File: /tmp/s.c, Line: 5, Column: 10 }
Function: baz
Hotness: 30
Args:
- Callee: foo
- String: will not be inlined into
- Caller: baz
...
--- !Missed
Pass: inline
Name: NotInlined
DebugLoc: { File: /tmp/s.c, Line: 5, Column: 18 }
Function: baz
Hotness: 30
Args:
- Callee: bar
- String: will not be inlined into
- Caller: baz
...
This is a summary of the high-level decisions:
* There is a new streaming interface to emit optimization remarks.
E.g. for the inliner remark above:
ORE.emit(DiagnosticInfoOptimizationRemarkMissed(
DEBUG_TYPE, "NotInlined", &I)
<< NV("Callee", Callee) << " will not be inlined into "
<< NV("Caller", CS.getCaller()) << setIsVerbose());
NV stands for named value and allows the YAML client to process a remark
using its name (NotInlined) and the named arguments (Callee and Caller)
without parsing the text of the message.
Subsequent patches will update ORE users to use the new streaming API.
* I am using YAML I/O for writing the YAML file. YAML I/O requires you
to specify reading and writing at once but reading is highly non-trivial
for some of the more complex LLVM types. Since it's not clear that we
(ever) want to use LLVM to parse this YAML file, the code supports and
asserts that we're writing only.
On the other hand, I did experiment that the class hierarchy starting at
DiagnosticInfoOptimizationBase can be mapped back from YAML generated
here (see D24479).
* The YAML stream is stored in the LLVM context.
* In the example, we can probably further specify the IR value used,
i.e. print "Function" rather than "Value".
* As before hotness is computed in the analysis pass instead of
DiganosticInfo. This avoids the layering problem since BFI is in
Analysis while DiagnosticInfo is in IR.
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D19678#419445
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24587
llvm-svn: 282499
Summary:
We don't currently need this facility for CFI. Disabling individual hot methods proved
to be a better strategy in Chrome.
Also, the design of the feature is suboptimal, as pointed out by Peter Collingbourne.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24948
llvm-svn: 282461
Summary:
This patch improves thinlto importer
by importing 3x larger functions that are called from hot block.
I compared performance with the trunk on spec, and there
were about 2% on povray and 3.33% on milc. These results seems
to be consistant and match the results Teresa got with her simple
heuristic. Some benchmarks got slower but I think they are just
noisy (mcf, xalancbmki, omnetpp)- running the benchmarks again with
more iterations to confirm. Geomean of all benchmarks including the noisy ones
were about +0.02%.
I see much better improvement on google branch with Easwaran patch
for pgo callsite inlining (the inliner actually inline those big functions)
Over all I see +0.5% improvement, and I get +8.65% on povray.
So I guess we will see much bigger change when Easwaran patch will land
(it depends on new pass manager), but it is still worth putting this to trunk
before it.
Implementation details changes:
- Removed CallsiteCount.
- ProfileCount got replaced by Hotness
- hot-import-multiplier is set to 3.0 for now,
didn't have time to tune it up, but I see that we get most of the interesting
functions with 3, so there is no much performance difference with higher, and
binary size doesn't grow as much as with 10.0.
Reviewers: eraman, mehdi_amini, tejohnson
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24638
llvm-svn: 282437
This patch ensures that we actually scalarize instructions marked scalar after
vectorization. Previously, such instructions may have been vectorized instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23889
llvm-svn: 282418
Summary:
If coroutine has no suspend points, remove heap allocation and turn a coroutine into a normal function.
Also, if a pattern is detected that coroutine resumes or destroys itself prior to coro.suspend call, turn the suspend point into a simple jump to resume or cleanup label. This pattern occurs when coroutines are used to propagate errors in functions that return expected<T>.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24408
llvm-svn: 282414
The index of the new insertelement instruction was evaluated in the
wrong way, it was considered as the index of the inserted value instead
of index of the position, where the value should be inserted.
llvm-svn: 282401
This patch fixes PR30366.
Function foldUDivShl() worked under the assumption that one of the values
in input to the function was always an instance of llvm::Instruction.
However, function visitUDivOperand() (the only user of foldUDivShl) was
clearly violating that precondition; internally, visitUDivOperand() uses pattern
matches to check the operands of a udiv. Pattern matchers for binary operators
know how to handle both Instruction and ConstantExpr values.
This patch fixes the problem in foldUDivShl(). Now we use pattern matchers
instead of explicit casts to Instruction. The reduced test case from PR30366
has been added to test file InstCombine/udiv-simplify.ll.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24565
llvm-svn: 282398
Stop looking at users of UndefValue and ConstantPointerNull in the
objective C ARC optimizers. The other users aren't actually
interesting, since they're not pointing at a particular object. I
imagine these calls could be optimized through -instcombine... maybe
they already are?
These early returns will be required at some point in the future, with a
WIP patch that asserts when someone accesses a use-list on ConstantData.
llvm-svn: 282338
Assumptions on UndefValue and ConstantPointerNull aren't relevant to
other users. Ignore them entirely to avoid wasting cycles walking
through their (possibly extremely extensive (cross-module)) use-lists.
It wasn't clear how to add a specific test for this, and it'll be
covered anyway by an eventual patch that asserts when trying to access
the use-list of an instance of ConstantData.
llvm-svn: 282334
Return early from llvm::isSafeToDestroyConstant() whenever the value
`isa<ConstantData>()`. These constants are shared across the
LLVMContext. We never really want to delete them here, and walking
their use-lists can be very expensive.
(This is motivated by an eventual goal of removing use-lists entirely
from ConstantData.)
llvm-svn: 282320
If inserting more than one constant into a vector:
define <4 x float> @foo(<4 x float> %x) {
%ins1 = insertelement <4 x float> %x, float 1.0, i32 1
%ins2 = insertelement <4 x float> %ins1, float 2.0, i32 2
ret <4 x float> %ins2
}
InstCombine could reduce that to a shufflevector:
define <4 x float> @goo(<4 x float> %x) {
%shuf = shufflevector <4 x float> %x, <4 x float> <float undef, float 1.0, float 2.0, float undef>, <4 x i32><i32 0, i32 5, i32 6, i32 3>
ret <4 x float> %shuf
}
Also, InstCombine tries to convert shuffle instruction to single insertelement, if one of the vectors is a constant vector and only a single element from this constant should be used in shuffle, i.e.
shufflevector <4 x float> %v, <4 x float> <float undef, float 1.0, float
undef, float undef>, <4 x i32> <i32 0, i32 5, i32 undef, i32 undef> ->
insertelement <4 x float> %v, float 1.0, 1
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24182
llvm-svn: 282237
We already have the udiv variant of this transform, so I think this is ok for
InstCombine too even though there is an increase in IR instructions. As the
tests and TODO comments show, the transform can lead to follow-on combines.
This should fix: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28672
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24527
llvm-svn: 282209
and also the dependent r282175 "GVN-hoist: do not dereference null pointers"
It's causing compiler crashes building Harfbuzz (PR30499).
llvm-svn: 282199
To hoist stores past loads, we used to search for potential
conflicting loads on the hoisting path by following a MemorySSA
def-def link from the store to be hoisted to the previous
defining memory access, and from there we followed the def-use
chains to all the uses that occur on the hoisting path. The
problem is that the def-def link may point to a store that does
not alias with the store to be hoisted, and so the loads that are
walked may not alias with the store to be hoisted, and even as in
the testcase of PR30216, the loads that may alias with the store
to be hoisted are not visited.
The current patch visits all loads on the path from the store to
be hoisted to the hoisting position and uses the alias analysis
to ask whether the store may alias the load. I was not able to
use the MemorySSA functionality to ask for whether load and
store are clobbered: I'm not sure which function to call, so I
used a call to AA->isNoAlias().
Store past store is still working as before using a MemorySSA
query: I added an extra test to pr30216.ll to make sure store
past store does not regress.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24517
llvm-svn: 282168
Without this patch, GVN-hoist would think that a branch instruction is a scalar instruction
and would try to value number it. The patch filters out all such kind of irrelevant instructions.
A bit frustrating is that there is no easy way to discard all those very infrequent instructions,
a bit like isa<TerminatorInst> that stands for a large family of instructions. I'm thinking that
checking for those very infrequent other instructions would cost us more in compilation time
than just letting those instructions getting numbered, so I'm still thinking that a simpler check:
if (isa<TerminatorInst>(I))
return false;
is better than listing all the other less frequent instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23929
llvm-svn: 282160
The additional fix is:
When adding debug information to a lowered phi node in mem2reg
check that we have a valid insertion point after the phi for adding
the debug information.
This change addresses the issue in pr30468 where a lowered phi was
added before a catchswitch and no debug information should be added
after the phi in this case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24797
llvm-svn: 282155
For MIPS '#' is the start of comment line. Therefore we get assembler errors if # is used in the structure names.
Differential: D24334
Reviewed by: zhaoqin
llvm-svn: 282141
Currently, we give up on loop interchange if we encounter a flow dependency
anywhere in the loop list. Worse yet, we don't even track output dependencies.
This patch updates the dependency matrix computation to track flow and output
dependencies in the same way we track anti dependencies.
This improves an internal workload by 2.2x.
Note the loop interchange pass is off by default and it can be enabled with
'-mllvm -enable-loopinterchange'
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24564
llvm-svn: 282101
If we identify an instruction as uniform after vectorization, we know that we
should only use the value corresponding to the first vector lane of each unroll
iteration. However, when scalarizing such instructions, we still produce values
for the other vector lanes. This patch prevents us from generating the unused
scalars.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24275
llvm-svn: 282087
Summary: Now that we have more precise debug info, we should change back to use maximum to get basic block weight.
Reviewers: dnovillo
Subscribers: andreadb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24788
llvm-svn: 282084
Summary:
This is an NFC refactoring change as a precursor to the actual fix for rematerializing in
presence of phi.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24399
Pasted from review:
findRematerializableChainToBasePointer changed to return the root of the
chain. instead of true or false.
move the PHI matching logic into the caller by inspecting the root return value.
This includes an assertion that the alternate root is in the liveset for the
call.
Tested with current RS4GC tests.
Reviewers: reames, sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24780
llvm-svn: 282023
This is a follow-up to r281284. Global Variables now can have
!dbg attachements, so ASAN should clone these when generating a
sanitized copy of a global variable.
<rdar://problem/24899262>
llvm-svn: 281994
The routines llvm::ConvertDebugDeclareToDebugValue() always returned
a true value which was never checked at the call site; change the
function return type to void.
This NFC cleanup was approved in the review https://reviews.llvm.org/D23715
llvm-svn: 281964
SROA doesn't preserve the llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access metadata when it
transforms loads/stores. This patch fixes a couple occurences of this
issue.
(Partially addresses PR28981).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23549
llvm-svn: 281960
When looking at the scribus_1.3 example from https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=10584, I noticed that we were spending a large amount of time computing loop exits in LCSSA. This code appears to be written with the assumption that LoopExits are stored in the Loop and thus cheap to query. This is not true, so we should cache the result across the potentially long running loop which tends to visit a small handful of Loops.
On the particular example from 10584, this change drops the time spent in LCSSA computation by about 80%.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24509
llvm-svn: 281949
Summary: Callsites in the same basic block should share the same hotness. This patch checks for the hottest callsite in the same basic block, and use the hotness for all callsites in that basic block for early inline decisions. It also fixes the test to add "-S" so theat the "CHECK-NOT" is actually checking the content.
Reviewers: dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24734
llvm-svn: 281927
Summary: It does not make sense to set equal weights for all unkown branches as we have static branch prediction available.
Reviewers: dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24732
llvm-svn: 281912
Summary: The call target count profile is directly derived from LBR branch->target data. This is more reliable than instruction frequency profiles that could be moved across basic block boundaries. This patches uses call target count profile to annotate call instructions.
Reviewers: davidxl, dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24410
llvm-svn: 281911
Summary:
This patch is adding the support for a shadow memory with
dynamically allocated address range.
The compiler-rt needs to export a symbol containing the shadow
memory range.
This is required to support ASAN on windows 64-bits.
Reviewers: kcc, rnk, vitalybuka
Subscribers: kubabrecka, dberris, llvm-commits, chrisha
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23354
llvm-svn: 281908
When phi nodes are created in the -mem2reg phase, the @llvm.dbg.declare
entries are converted to @llvm.dbg.value entries at the place where the
store instructions existed. However no entry is created to describe
the resulting value of the phi node.
The effect of this is especially noticeable in for loops which have a
constant for the intial value; the loop control variable's location
would be described as the intial constant value in the loop body once
the -mem2reg optimization phase was run.
This change adds the creation of the @llvm.dbg.value entries to describe
variables whose location is the result of a phi node created in -mem2reg.
Also when the phi node is finally lowered to a machine instruction it
is important that the lowered "load" instruction is placed before the
associated DEBUG_VALUE entry describing the value loaded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23715
llvm-svn: 281895
We were updating metadata but not IR flags. Because we pick an arbitrary instruction to be the CSE candidate, it comes down to luck (50% or less chance) if this results in broken codegen or not, which is why PR30373 which is actually not the fault of the commit it was bisected down to.
Fixes PR30373.
llvm-svn: 281889
Summary: Previously we reline on inst-combine to remove inlinable invoke instructions. This causes trouble because a few extra optimizations are schedule early that could introduce too much CFG change (e.g. simplifycfg removes too much control flow). This patch handles invoke instruction in-place during sample profile annotation, so that we do not rely on instcombine to remove those invoke instructions.
Reviewers: davidxl, dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24409
llvm-svn: 281870
Simplified GEP cloning in vectorizeMemoryInstruction().
Added an assertion that checks consecutive GEP, which should have only one loop-variant operand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24557
llvm-svn: 281851
Summary:
This fixes an issue when files are compiled with -flto=thin
at default -O0. We need to rename anonymous globals before attempting
to write the module summary because all values need names for
the summary. This was happening at -O1 and above, but not before
the early exit when constructing the pipeline for -O0.
Also add an internal -prepare-for-thinlto option to enable this
to be tested via opt.
Fixes PR30419.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: probinson, llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24701
llvm-svn: 281840
The ValueSymbolTable is used to detect name conflict and rename
instructions automatically. This is not needed when the value
names are automatically discarded by the LLVMContext.
No functional change intended, just saving a little bit of memory.
This is a recommit of r281806 after fixing the accessor to return
a pointer instead of a reference and updating all the call-sites.
llvm-svn: 281813
computeKnownBits() already works for integer vectors, so allow vector types when calling that from InstCombine.
I don't think the change to use m_APInt in computeKnownBits is strictly necessary because we do check for
ConstantVector later, but it's more efficient to handle the splat case without needing to loop on vector elements.
This should work with InstSimplify, but doesn't yet, so I made that a FIXME comment on the test for PR24942:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24942
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24677
llvm-svn: 281777
A follow-up patch will rename this pass and the source file accordingly,
but I figured the non-NFC change will be easier to spot in isolation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24641
llvm-svn: 281744
These 2 helper functions were already using APInt internally, so just
change the API and caller to allow folds for splats. The scalar
regression tests look quite thorough, so I just added a couple of
tests to prove that vectors are handled too.
These folds should be grouped with the other cmp+shift folds though.
That can be an NFC follow-up.
llvm-svn: 281663
GlobalOpt is already dead-code-eliminating global definitions. With
this change it also takes care of declarations.
Hopefully this should make it now a strict superset of GlobalDCE.
This is important for LTO/ThinLTO as we don't want the linker to see
"undefined reference" when it processes the input files: it could
prevent proper internalization (or even load an extra file from a
static archive, changing the behavior of the program!).
llvm-svn: 281653
This pattern is matched in foldICmpBinOpEqualityWithConstant() and already works
with vectors too. I changed some comments over there to point out the current
location. The tests for this transform are currently in 'sub.ll'.
Note that the remaining folds in this block all require a sub too, so they should
get grouped with the other icmp(sub) patterns.
llvm-svn: 281627
Summary: The return value of `maybeInsertAsanInitAtFunctionEntry` is ignored.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits, chrisha, dberris
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24568
llvm-svn: 281620
This is a big glob of transforms that probably should work for vectors,
but currently they are disallowed because of ConstantInt guards.
llvm-svn: 281614
Summary:
Function __asan_default_options is called by __asan_init before the
shadow memory got initialized. Instrumenting that function may lead
to flaky execution.
As the __asan_default_options is provided by users, we cannot expect
them to add the appropriate function atttributes to avoid
instrumentation.
Reviewers: kcc, rnk
Subscribers: dberris, chrisha, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24566
llvm-svn: 281503
This patch moves the processing of pointer induction variables in
collectLoopUniforms from the consecutive pointer phase of the analysis to the
phi node phase. Previously, if a pointer induction variable was used by both a
scalarized non-memory instruction as well as a vectorized memory instruction,
we would incorrectly identify the pointer as uniform. Pointer induction
variables should be treated the same as other phi nodes. That is, they are
uniform if all users of the induction variable and induction variable update
are uniform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24511
llvm-svn: 281485
The '-asan-use-private-alias’ option (disabled by default) option is currently only enabled for Linux and ELF, but it also works on Darwin and Mach-O. This option also fixes a known problem with LTO on Darwin (https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/647). This patch enables the support for Darwin (but still keeps it off by default) and adds the LTO test case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24292
llvm-svn: 281470
ObjC library call with call return.
ARC contraction tries to replace uses of an argument passed to an
objective-c library call with the call return value. For example, in the
following IR, it replaces uses of argument %9 and uses of the values
discovered traversing the chain upwards (%7 and %8) with the call return
%10, if they are dominated by the call to @objc_autoreleaseReturnValue.
This transformation enables code-gen to tail-call the call to
@objc_autoreleaseReturnValue, which is necessary to enable auto release
return value optimization.
%7 = tail call i8* @objc_loadWeakRetained(i8** %6)
%8 = bitcast i8* %7 to %0*
%9 = bitcast %0* %8 to i8*
%10 = tail call i8* @objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(i8* %9)
ret %0* %8
Since r276727, llvm started removing redundant bitcasts and as a result
started feeding the following IR to ARC contraction:
%7 = tail call i8* @objc_loadWeakRetained(i8** %6)
%8 = bitcast i8* %7 to %0*
%9 = tail call i8* @objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(i8* %7)
ret %0* %8
ARC contraction no longer does the optimization described above since it
only traverses the chain upwards and fails to recognize that the
function return can be replaced by the call return. This commit changes
ARC contraction to traverse the chain downwards too and replace uses of
bitcasts with the call return.
rdar://problem/28011339
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24523
llvm-svn: 281419
Teach SimplifyLibcalls that in can treat functions annotated with
apcs, aapcs or aapcs_vfp like normal C functions if they only take
and return integer or pointer values, and the target is not iOS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24453
llvm-svn: 281322
This patch reverses the edge from DIGlobalVariable to GlobalVariable.
This will allow us to more easily preserve debug info metadata when
manipulating global variables.
Fixes PR30362. A program for upgrading test cases is attached to that
bug.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20147
llvm-svn: 281284
Trying to infer the 'returned' attribute if an argument is already
'returned' can lead to verification failure: inference might determine
that a different argument is passed through which would result in two
different arguments marked as 'returned'.
This fixes PR30350.
llvm-svn: 281221
This should *actually* fix PR30244. This cranks up the workaround for PR30188 so that we never sink loads or stores of allocas.
The idea is that these should be removed by SROA/Mem2Reg, and any movement of them may well confuse SROA or just cause unwanted code churn. It's not ideal that the midend should be crippled like this, but that unwanted churn can really cause significant regressions in important workloads (tsan).
llvm-svn: 281162
Exposed by PR30244, we will split a block currently if we think we can sink at least one instruction. However this isn't right - the reason we split predecessors is so that we can sink instructions that otherwise couldn't be sunk because it isn't safe to do so - stores, for example.
So, change the heuristic to only split if it thinks it can sink at least one non-speculatable instruction.
Should fix PR30244.
llvm-svn: 281160
Everything under foldICmpInstWithConstant() should now be working for
splat vectors via m_APInt matchers. Ie, I've removed all of the FIXMEs
that I added while cleaning that section up. Note that not all of the
associated FIXMEs in the regression tests are gone though, because some
of the tests require earlier folds that are still scalar-only.
llvm-svn: 281139
Summary:
Could be useful for comparison when we suspect that alloca was skipped
because of this.
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24437
llvm-svn: 281126
This would create a bitcast use which fails the verifier: swifterror values may
only be used by loads, stores, and as function arguments.
rdar://28233244
llvm-svn: 281114
Summary:
If one of the uses of the value is a single edge PHINode, handle it.
Original:
%val = something
<suspend>
%p = PHINode [%val]
After Spill + Part13:
%val = something
%slot = gep val.spill.slot
store %val, %slot
<suspend>
%p = load %slot
Plus tiny fixes/changes:
* use correct index for coro.free in CoroCleanup
* fixup id parameter in coro.free to allow authoring coroutine in plain C with __builtins
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24242
llvm-svn: 281020
Summary: The hoisted instruction is executed speculatively. It could affect the debugging experience as user would see gdb go into code that may not be expected to execute. It will also affect sample profile accuracy by assigning incorrect frequency to source within then/else branch.
Reviewers: davidxl, dblaikie, chandlerc, kcc, echristo
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, probinson, eric_niebler, andreadb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24164
llvm-svn: 280995
The test case included in r280979 wasn't checking what it was supposed to be
checking for the predicated store case. Fixing the test revealed that the
multi-use case (when a pointer is used by both vectorized and scalarized memory
accesses) wasn't being handled properly. We can't skip over
non-consecutive-like pointers since they may have looked consecutive-like with
a different memory access.
llvm-svn: 280992
Previously, all consecutive pointers were marked uniform after vectorization.
However, if a consecutive pointer is used by a memory access that is eventually
scalarized, the pointer won't remain uniform after all. An example is
predicated stores. Even though a predicated store may be consecutive, it will
still be scalarized, making it's pointer operand non-uniform.
This patch updates the logic in collectLoopUniforms to consider the cases where
a memory access may be scalarized. If a memory access may be scalarized, its
pointer operand is not marked uniform. The determination of whether a given
memory instruction will be scalarized or not has been moved into a common
function that is used by the vectorizer, cost model, and legality analysis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24271
llvm-svn: 280979
I introduced this potential bug by missing this diff in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL280873
...however, I'm not sure how to reach this code path with a regression test.
We may be able to remove this code and assume that the transform to a constant
is always handled by InstSimplify?
llvm-svn: 280964
Refactor replaceDominatedUsesWith to have a flag to control whether to replace uses in BB itself.
Summary: This is in preparation for LoopSink pass which calls replaceDominatedUsesWith to update after sinking.
llvm-svn: 280949
Summary:
C allows to jump over variables declaration so lifetime.start can be
avoid before variable usage. To avoid false-positives on such rare cases
we detect them and remove from lifetime analysis.
PR27453
PR28267
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24321
llvm-svn: 280907
Summary:
When cloning blocks for prologue/epilogue we need to replicate the loop
structure from the original loop. It wasn't a problem for the innermost
loops, but it led to an incorrect loop info when we unrolled a loop with
a child loop - in this case created prologue-loop had a child loop, but
loop info didn't reflect that.
This fixes PR28888.
Reviewers: chandlerc, sanjoy, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits, silvas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24203
llvm-svn: 280901
Summary:
C allows to jump over variables declaration so lifetime.start can be
avoid before variable usage. To avoid false-positives on such rare cases
we detect them and remove from lifetime analysis.
PR27453
PR28267
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24321
llvm-svn: 280880
We can't create metadata-valued PHIs; don't try to do so when sinking.
I created a test case for this using the @llvm.type.test intrinsic, because it
takes a metadata parameter and does not have severe side effects (thus
SimplifyCFG is willing to otherwise sink it).
Previously, running the test case would crash with:
Invalid use of metadata!
%.sink = select i1 %flag, metadata <...>, metadata <0x4e45dc0>
LLVM ERROR: Broken function found, compilation aborted!
llvm-svn: 280866
This is a revert of r280676 which was a revert of r280637;
ie, this is r280637 again. It was speculatively reverted to
help debug buildbot failures.
llvm-svn: 280861
Summary:
LSV replaces multiple adjacent loads with one vectorized load and a
bunch of extractelement instructions. This patch makes the
extractelement instructions' names match those of the original loads,
for (hopefully) improved readability.
Reviewers: asbirlea, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23748
llvm-svn: 280818
This fixes a similar issue to the one already fixed by r280804
(revieved in D24256). Revision 280804 fixed the problem with unsafe dyn_casts
in the extrq/extrqi combining logic. However, it turns out that even the
insertq/insertqi logic was affected by the same problem.
llvm-svn: 280807
This patch fixes an assertion failure caused by unsafe dynamic casts on the
constant operands of sse4a intrinsic calls to extrq/extrqi
The combine logic that simplifies sse4a extrq/extrqi intrinsic calls currently
checks if the input operands are constants. Internally, that logic relies on
dyn_casts of values returned by calls to method Constant::getAggregateElement.
However, method getAggregateElemet may return nullptr if the constant element
cannot be retrieved. So, all the dyn_casts can potentially fail. This is what
happens for example if a constexpr value is passed in input to an extrq/extrqi
intrinsic call.
This patch fixes the problem by using a dyn_cast_or_null (instead of a simple
dyn_cast) on the result of each call to Constant::getAggregateElement.
Added reproducible test cases to x86-sse4a.ll.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24256
llvm-svn: 280804
This reverts commit r280796, as it broke the AArch64 bots for no reason.
The tests were passing and we should try to keep them passing, so a proper
review should make that happen.
llvm-svn: 280802
In failure cases it's not guaranteed that the PHI we're inspecting is actually in the successor block! In this case we need to bail out early, and never query getIncomingValueForBlock() as that will cause an assert.
llvm-svn: 280794
I should have realised this the first time around, but if we're avoiding sinking stores where the operands come from allocas so they don't create selects, we also have to do the same for loads because SROA will be just as defective looking at loads of selected addresses as stores.
Fixes PR30188 (again).
llvm-svn: 280792
PR30292 showed a case where our PHI checking wasn't correct. We were checking that all values were used by the same PHI before deciding to sink, but we weren't checking that the incoming values for that PHI were what we expected. As a result, we had to bail out after block splitting which caused us to never reach a steady state in SimplifyCFG.
Fixes PR30292.
llvm-svn: 280790
Currently the pass updates branch weights in the IR if the function has
any PGO info (entry frequency is set). However we could still have
regions of the CFG that does not have branch weights collected (e.g. a
cold region). In this case we'd use static estimates. Since static
estimates for branches are determined independently, they are
inconsistent. Updating them can "randomly" inflate block frequencies.
I've run into this in a completely cold loop of h264ref from
SPEC. -Rpass-with-hotness showed the loop to be completely cold during
inlining (before JT) but completely hot during vectorization (after JT).
The new testcase demonstrate the problem. We check array elements
against 1, 2 and 3 in a loop. The check against 3 is the loop-exiting
check. The block names should be self-explanatory.
In this example, jump threading incorrectly updates the weight of the
loop-exiting branch to 0, drastically inflating the frequency of the
loop (in the range of billions).
There is no run-time profile info for edges inside the loop, so branch
probabilities are estimated. These are the resulting branch and block
frequencies for the loop body:
check_1 (16)
(8) / |
eq_1 | (8)
\ |
check_2 (16)
(8) / |
eq_2 | (8)
\ |
check_3 (16)
(1) / |
(loop exit) | (15)
|
(back edge)
First we thread eq_1 -> check_2 to check_3. Frequencies are updated to
remove the frequency of eq_1 from check_2 and then from the false edge
leaving check_2. Changed frequencies are highlighted with * *:
check_1 (16)
(8) / |
eq_1~ | (8)
/ |
/ check_2 (*8*)
/ (8) / |
\ eq_2 | (*0*)
\ \ |
` --- check_3 (16)
(1) / |
(loop exit) | (15)
|
(back edge)
Next we thread eq_1 -> check_3 and eq_2 -> check_3 to check_1 as new
back edges. Frequencies are updated to remove the frequency of eq_1 and
eq_3 from check_3 and then the false edge leaving check_3 (changed
frequencies are highlighted with * *):
check_1 (16)
(8) / |
eq_1~ | (8)
/ |
/ check_2 (*8*)
/ (8) / |
/-- eq_2~ | (*0*)
(back edge) |
check_3 (*0*)
(*0*) / |
(loop exit) | (*0*)
|
(back edge)
As a result, the loop exit edge ends up with 0 frequency which in turn makes
the loop header to have maximum frequency.
There are a few potential problems here:
1. The profile data seems odd. There is a single profile sample of the
loop being entered. On the other hand, there are no weights inside the
loop.
2. Based on static estimation we shouldn't set edges to "extreme"
values, i.e. extremely likely or unlikely.
3. We shouldn't create profile metadata that is calculated from static
estimation. I am not sure what policy is but it seems to make sense to
treat profile metadata as something that is known to originate from
profiling. Estimated probabilities should only be reflected in BPI/BFI.
Any one of these would probably fix the immediate problem. I went for 3
because I think it's a good policy to have and added a FIXME about 2.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24118
llvm-svn: 280713
Summary:
Move early uses of spilled variables after CoroBegin.
For example, if a parameter had address taken, we may end up with the code
like:
define @f(i32 %n) {
%n.addr = alloca i32
store %n, %n.addr
...
call @coro.begin
This patch fixes the problem by moving uses of spilled variables after CoroBegin.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24234
llvm-svn: 280678
Summary:
A frontend may designate a particular suspend to be final, by setting the second argument of the coro.suspend intrinsic to true. Such a suspend point has two properties:
* it is possible to check whether a suspended coroutine is at the final suspend point via coro.done intrinsic;
* a resumption of a coroutine stopped at the final suspend point leads to undefined behavior. The only possible action for a coroutine at a final suspend point is destroying it via coro.destroy intrinsic.
This patch adds final suspend handling logic to CoroEarly and CoroSplit passes.
Now, the final suspend point example from docs\Coroutines.rst compiles and produces expected result (see test/Transform/Coroutines/ex5.ll).
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24068
llvm-svn: 280646
The transform in question:
icmp (and (trunc W), C2), C1 -> icmp (and W, C2'), C1'
...is still not enabled for vectors, thus no functional change intended.
It's not clear to me if this is a good transform for vectors or even
scalars in general. Changing that behavior may be a follow-on patch.
llvm-svn: 280627
memcpy with ld/st.
When InstCombine replaces a memcpy with loads+stores it does not copy over the
llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access from the memcpy instruction. This patch fixes
that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23499
llvm-svn: 280617
Summary:
The inliner may need to determine where a given funclet unwinds to,
and this determination may depend on other funclets throughout the
funclet tree. The code that performs this walk in getUnwindDestToken
memoizes results to avoid redundant computations. In the case that
a funclet's unwind destination is derived from its ancestor, there's
code to walk back down the tree from the ancestor updating the memo
map of its descendants to record the unwind destination. This change
fixes that code to account for the case that some descendant has a
different unwind destination, which can happen if that unwind dest
is a descendant of the EHPad being queried and thus didn't determine
its unwind destination.
Also update test inline-funclets.ll, which is supposed to cover such
scenarios, to include a case that fails an assertion without this fix
but passes with it.
Fixes PR29151.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24117
llvm-svn: 280610
Inheriting from std::iterator uses more boiler-plate than manual
typedefs. Avoid that in both ilist_iterator and
MachineInstrBundleIterator.
This has the side effect of removing ilist_iterator from certain ADL
lookups in namespace std; calls to std::next need to be qualified by
"std::" that didn't have to before. The one case of this in-tree was
operating on a temporary, so I used the more compact operator++.
llvm-svn: 280570
The motivating case occurs with SSE/AVX scalar intrinsics, so this is a first step towards
shrinking that to a single shufflevector.
Note that the transform is intentionally limited to shuffles that are equivalent to vector
selects to avoid creating arbitrary shuffle masks that may not lower well.
This should solve PR29126:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=29126
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23886
llvm-svn: 280504
For uniform instructions, we're only required to generate a scalar value for
the first vector lane of each unroll iteration. Thus, if we have a reverse
interleaved group, computing the member index off the scalar GEP corresponding
to the last vector lane of its pointer operand technically makes the GEP
non-uniform. We should compute the member index off the first scalar GEP
instead.
I've added the updated member index computation to the existing reverse
interleaved group test.
llvm-svn: 280497
We're sinking stores, which is a good thing, but in the process creating selects for the store address operand, which SROA/Mem2Reg can't look through, which caused serious regressions.
The real fix is in SROA, which I'll be looking into.
llvm-svn: 280470
r280425 | dehao | 2016-09-01 16:15:50 -0700 (Thu, 01 Sep 2016) | 9 lines
Refactor LICM pass in preparation for LoopSink pass.
Summary: LoopSink pass uses some common function in LICM. This patch refactor the LICM code to make it usable by LoopSink pass (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22778).
r280429 | dehao | 2016-09-01 16:31:25 -0700 (Thu, 01 Sep 2016) | 9 lines
Refactor LICM to expose canSinkOrHoistInst to LoopSink pass.
Summary: LoopSink pass shares the same canSinkOrHoistInst functionality with LICM pass. This patch exposes this function in preparation of https://reviews.llvm.org/D22778
llvm-svn: 280453
Summary: LoopSink pass shares the same canSinkOrHoistInst functionality with LICM pass. This patch exposes this function in preparation of https://reviews.llvm.org/D22778
Reviewers: chandlerc, davidxl, danielcdh
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24171
llvm-svn: 280429
Summary: This is in preparation for LoopSink pass which calls replaceDominatedUsesWith to update after sinking.
Reviewers: chandlerc, davidxl, danielcdh
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24170
llvm-svn: 280427
Summary: LoopSink pass uses some common function in LICM. This patch refactor the LICM code to make it usable by LoopSink pass (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22778).
Reviewers: chandlerc, davidxl, danielcdh
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24168
llvm-svn: 280425
We can now maintain scalar values in VectorLoopValueMap. Thus, we no longer
have to create temporary vectors with insertelement instructions when handling
pointer induction variables. This case was mistakenly missed from r279649 when
refactoring the other scalarization code.
llvm-svn: 280405
This patch moves the allocation of VectorParts for PHI nodes into the actual
PHI widening code. Previously, we allocated these VectorParts in
vectorizeBlockInLoop, and passed them by reference to widenPHIInstruction. Upon
returning, we would then map the VectorParts in VectorLoopValueMap. This
behavior is problematic for the cases where we only want to generate a scalar
version of a PHI node. For example, if in the future we only generate a scalar
version of an induction variable, we would end up inserting an empty vector
entry into the map once we return to vectorizeBlockInLoop. We now no longer
need to pass VectorParts to the various PHI widening functions, and we can keep
VectorParts allocation as close as possible to the point at which they are
actually mapped in VectorLoopValueMap.
llvm-svn: 280390
Previous change broke the C API for creating an EarlyCSE pass w/
MemorySSA by adding a bool parameter to control whether MemorySSA was
used or not. This broke the OCaml bindings. Instead, change the old C
API entry point back and add a new one to request an EarlyCSE pass with
MemorySSA.
llvm-svn: 280379
While removing a scalar shackle from an icmp fold, I noticed that I couldn't find any tests to trigger
this code path.
The 'and' shrinking transform should be handled by InstCombiner::foldCastedBitwiseLogic()
or eliminated with InstSimplify. The icmp narrowing is part of InstCombiner::foldICmpWithCastAndCast().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24031
llvm-svn: 280370
This was a real restriction in the original version of SinkIfThenCodeToEnd. Now it's been rewritten, the restriction can be lifted.
As part of this, we handle a very common and useful case where one of the incoming branches is actually conditional. Consider:
if (a)
x(1);
else if (b)
x(2);
This produces the following CFG:
[if]
/ \
[x(1)] [if]
| | \
| | \
| [x(2)] |
\ | /
[ end ]
[end] has two unconditional predecessor arcs and one conditional. The conditional refers to the implicit empty 'else' arc. This same pattern can also be caused by an empty default block in a switch.
We can't sink the call to x() down to end because no call to x() happens on the third incoming arc (assume that x() has sideeffects for the sake of argument; if something is safe to speculate we could indeed sink nevertheless but this cannot happen in the general case and causes many extra selects).
We are now able to detect this case and split off the unconditional arcs to a common successor:
[if]
/ \
[x(1)] [if]
| | \
| | \
| [x(2)] |
\ / |
[sink.split] |
\ /
[ end ]
Now we can sink the call to x() into %sink.split. This can cause significant code simplification in many testcases.
llvm-svn: 280364
r279460 rewrote this function to be able to handle more than two incoming edges and took pains to ensure this didn't regress anything.
This time we change the logic for determining if an instruction should be sunk. Previously we used a single pass greedy algorithm - sink instructions until one requires more than one PHI node or we run out of instructions to sink.
This had the problem that sinking instructions that had non-identical but trivially the same operands needed extra logic so we sunk them aggressively. For example:
%a = load i32* %b %d = load i32* %b
%c = gep i32* %a, i32 0 %e = gep i32* %d, i32 1
Sinking %c and %e would naively require two PHI merges as %a != %d. But the loads are obviously equivalent (and maybe can't be hoisted because there is no common predecessor).
This is why we implemented the fairly complex function areValuesTriviallySame(), to look through trivial differences like this. However it's just not clever enough.
Instead, throw areValuesTriviallySame away, use pointer equality to check equivalence of operands and switch to a two-stage algorithm.
In the "scan" stage, we look at every sinkable instruction in isolation from end of block to front. If it's sinkable, we keep track of all operands that required PHI merging.
In the "sink" stage, we iteratively sink the last non-terminator in the source blocks. But when calculating how many PHIs are actually required to be inserted (to work out if we should stop or not) we remove any values that have already been sunk from the set of PHI-merges required, which allows us to be more aggressive.
This turns an algorithm with potentially recursive lookahead (looking through GEPs, casts, loads and any other instruction potentially not CSE'd) to two linear scans.
llvm-svn: 280351
We iterate over the result from SafeToMergeTerminators, so make it a SmallSetVector instead of a SmallPtrSet.
Should fix stage3 convergence builds.
llvm-svn: 280342
A very important case is not handled here: multiple arcs to a single block with a PHI. Consider:
a:
%1 = icmp %b, 1
br %1, label %c, label %e
c:
%2 = icmp %b, 2
br %2, label %d, label %e
d:
br %e
e:
phi [0, %a], [1, %c], [2, %d]
FoldValueComparisonIntoPredecessors will refuse to fold this, as it doesn't know how to deal with two arcs to a common destination with different PHI values. The answer is obvious - just split all conflicting arcs.
llvm-svn: 280338
-fprofile-dir=path allows the user to specify where .gcda files should be
emitted when the program is run. In particular, this is the first flag that
causes the .gcno and .o files to have different paths, LLVM is extended to
support this. -fprofile-dir= does not change the file name in the .gcno (and
thus where lcov looks for the source) but it does change the name in the .gcda
(and thus where the runtime library writes the .gcda file). It's different from
a GCOV_PREFIX because a user can observe that the GCOV_PREFIX_STRIP will strip
paths off of -fprofile-dir= but not off of a supplied GCOV_PREFIX.
To implement this we split -coverage-file into -coverage-data-file and
-coverage-notes-file to specify the two different names. The !llvm.gcov
metadata node grows from a 2-element form {string coverage-file, node dbg.cu}
to 3-elements, {string coverage-notes-file, string coverage-data-file, node
dbg.cu}. In the 3-element form, the file name is already "mangled" with
.gcno/.gcda suffixes, while the 2-element form left that to the middle end
pass.
llvm-svn: 280306
This is prep work before changing the callers to also use APInt which will
allow folds for splat vectors. Currently, the callers have ConstantInt
guards in place, so no functional change intended with this commit.
llvm-svn: 280282
Summary:
Current implementation of LI verifier isn't ideal and fails to detect
some cases when LI is incorrect. For instance, it checks that all
recorded loops are in a correct form, but it has no way to check if
there are no more other (unrecorded in LI) loops in the function. This
patch adds a way to detect such bugs.
Reviewers: chandlerc, sanjoy, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits, silvas, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23437
llvm-svn: 280280
Summary:
Use MemorySSA, if requested, to do less conservative memory dependency
checking.
This change doesn't enable the MemorySSA enhanced EarlyCSE in the
default pipelines, so should be NFC.
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, reames, majnemer
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19821
llvm-svn: 280279
Passing the types/opcode check still doesn't guarantee we'll actually vectorize.
Therefore, just make it clear we're attempting to vectorize.
llvm-svn: 280263
This is a first step towards supporting deopt value lowering and reporting entirely with the register allocator. I hope to build on this in the near future to support live-on-return semantics, but I have a use case which allows me to test and investigate code quality with just the live-in semantics so I've chosen to start there. For those curious, my use cases is our implementation of the "__llvm_deoptimize" function we bind to @llvm.deoptimize. I'm choosing not to hard code that fact in the patch and instead make it configurable via function attributes.
The basic approach here is modelled on what is done for the "Live In" values on stackmaps and patchpoints. (A secondary goal here is to remove one of the last barriers to merging the pseudo instructions.) We start by adding the operands directly to the STATEPOINT SDNode. Once we've lowered to MI, we extend the remat logic used by the register allocator to fold virtual register uses into StackMap::Indirect entries as needed. This does rely on the fact that the register allocator rematerializes. If it didn't along some code path, we could end up with more vregs than physical registers and fail to allocate.
Today, we *only* fold in the register allocator. This can create some weird effects when combined with arguments passed on the stack because we don't fold them appropriately. I have an idea how to fix that, but it needs this patch in place to work on that effectively. (There's some weird interaction with the scheduler as well, more investigation needed.)
My near term plan is to land this patch off-by-default, experiment in my local tree to identify any correctness issues and then start fixing codegen problems one by one as I find them. Once I have the live-in lowering fully working (both correctness and code quality), I'm hoping to move on to the live-on-return semantics. Note: I don't have any *known* miscompiles with this patch enabled, but I'm pretty sure I'll find at least a couple. Thus, the "experimental" tag and the fact it's off by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24000
llvm-svn: 280250
We check that a sinking candidate is used by only one PHI node during our legality checks. However for instructions that are used by other sinking candidates our heuristic is less conservative. This can result in a candidate actually being illegal when we come to sink it because of how we sunk a predecessor. Do the used-by-only-one-PHI checks again during sinking to ensure we don't crash.
llvm-svn: 280228
We're sinking stores, which is a good thing, but in the process creating selects for the store address operand, which SROA/Mem2Reg can't look through, which caused serious regressions.
The real fix is in SROA, which I'll be looking into.
llvm-svn: 280219
A very important case is not handled here: multiple arcs to a single block with a PHI. Consider:
a:
%1 = icmp %b, 1
br %1, label %c, label %e
c:
%2 = icmp %b, 2
br %2, label %d, label %e
d:
br %e
e:
phi [0, %a], [1, %c], [2, %d]
FoldValueComparisonIntoPredecessors will refuse to fold this, as it doesn't know how to deal with two arcs to a common destination with different PHI values. The answer is obvious - just split all conflicting arcs.
llvm-svn: 280218
This was a real restriction in the original version of SinkIfThenCodeToEnd. Now it's been rewritten, the restriction can be lifted.
As part of this, we handle a very common and useful case where one of the incoming branches is actually conditional. Consider:
if (a)
x(1);
else if (b)
x(2);
This produces the following CFG:
[if]
/ \
[x(1)] [if]
| | \
| | \
| [x(2)] |
\ | /
[ end ]
[end] has two unconditional predecessor arcs and one conditional. The conditional refers to the implicit empty 'else' arc. This same pattern can also be caused by an empty default block in a switch.
We can't sink the call to x() down to end because no call to x() happens on the third incoming arc (assume that x() has sideeffects for the sake of argument; if something is safe to speculate we could indeed sink nevertheless but this cannot happen in the general case and causes many extra selects).
We are now able to detect this case and split off the unconditional arcs to a common successor:
[if]
/ \
[x(1)] [if]
| | \
| | \
| [x(2)] |
\ / |
[sink.split] |
\ /
[ end ]
Now we can sink the call to x() into %sink.split. This can cause significant code simplification in many testcases.
llvm-svn: 280217
r279460 rewrote this function to be able to handle more than two incoming edges and took pains to ensure this didn't regress anything.
This time we change the logic for determining if an instruction should be sunk. Previously we used a single pass greedy algorithm - sink instructions until one requires more than one PHI node or we run out of instructions to sink.
This had the problem that sinking instructions that had non-identical but trivially the same operands needed extra logic so we sunk them aggressively. For example:
%a = load i32* %b %d = load i32* %b
%c = gep i32* %a, i32 0 %e = gep i32* %d, i32 1
Sinking %c and %e would naively require two PHI merges as %a != %d. But the loads are obviously equivalent (and maybe can't be hoisted because there is no common predecessor).
This is why we implemented the fairly complex function areValuesTriviallySame(), to look through trivial differences like this. However it's just not clever enough.
Instead, throw areValuesTriviallySame away, use pointer equality to check equivalence of operands and switch to a two-stage algorithm.
In the "scan" stage, we look at every sinkable instruction in isolation from end of block to front. If it's sinkable, we keep track of all operands that required PHI merging.
In the "sink" stage, we iteratively sink the last non-terminator in the source blocks. But when calculating how many PHIs are actually required to be inserted (to work out if we should stop or not) we remove any values that have already been sunk from the set of PHI-merges required, which allows us to be more aggressive.
This turns an algorithm with potentially recursive lookahead (looking through GEPs, casts, loads and any other instruction potentially not CSE'd) to two linear scans.
llvm-svn: 280216
This was deliberately disabled during my rewrite of SinkIfThenToEnd to keep behaviour
at least vaguely consistent with the previous version and keep it as close to NFC as
I could.
There's no real reason not to merge sideeffect calls though, so let's do it! Small fixup
along the way to ensure we don't create indirect calls.
Should fix PR28964.
llvm-svn: 280215
Summary:
1) CoroEarly now lowers llvm.coro.promise intrinsic that allows to obtain
a coroutine promise pointer from a coroutine frame and vice versa.
2) CoroFrame now interprets Promise argument of llvm.coro.begin to
place CoroutinPromise alloca at a deterministic offset from the coroutine frame.
Now, the coroutine promise example from docs\Coroutines.rst compiles and produces expected result (see test/Transform/Coroutines/ex4.ll).
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23993
llvm-svn: 280184
It's much less code and easier to read if we don't duplicate
everything between the 'Inside' and not 'Inside' cases.
As noted with the FIXME, the goal is to make this vector-friendly
in a follow-up patch.
llvm-svn: 280183
Summary:
LSV was using two vector sets (heads and tails) to track pairs of adjiacent position to vectorize.
A recent optimization is trying to obtain the longest chain to vectorize and assumes the positions
in heads(H) and tails(T) match, which is not the case is there are multiple tails for the same head.
e.g.:
i1: store a[0]
i2: store a[1]
i3: store a[1]
Leads to:
H: i1
T: i2 i3
Instead of:
H: i1 i1
T: i2 i3
So the positions for instructions that follow i3 will have different indexes in H/T.
This patch resolves PR29148.
This issue also surfaced the fact that if the chain is too long, and TLI
returns a "not-fast" answer, the whole chain will be abandoned for
vectorization, even though a smaller one would be beneficial.
Added a testcase and FIXME for this.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm, jlebar
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24057
llvm-svn: 280179
We don't need to limit predication to blocks that have a single incoming
edge, we just need to use the right mask.
This fixes PR30172.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24009
llvm-svn: 280148